Dandy Jack
TMF Expert
- Joined
- May 17, 2002
- Messages
- 379
- Points
- 0
Dateline 23 Jan 2013
Place: The Netherlands:
The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy took power in November 2012. The Labour
party included...
Corporate Giants have PO Box companies located in the Netherlands to avoid taxes. Both
ruling parties are “fed up with so called PO Box companies.
Large companies now use the Netherlands for a tax haven...
Now, as a deficit-strapped Europe raises retirement ages and taxes on the working class,
The Netherlands’ comes under strict scrutiny for it's important role as a $13 trillion
part of a global corporate tax-avoiding network.
Taxing agreements...
Under such agreements, multinational companies agree to leave a tiny amount of income in the Netherlands to be taxed in exchange for being permitted to route profits through the country. This remainder left for the revenue authorities in the Netherlands is known to tax planners as “the Dutch Turn.”
The poor pay more while big corporate giants like Google, Merk and Dell and enjoy
tax avoidance through a series of complicated tax schemes.
Keep in mind nothing the large companies is doing is illegal.
It opens a discussion about tax havens for the world's largest corporations.
http://bloom.bg/USC0fb
Dandy Jack!
Place: The Netherlands:
The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy took power in November 2012. The Labour
party included...
Corporate Giants have PO Box companies located in the Netherlands to avoid taxes. Both
ruling parties are “fed up with so called PO Box companies.
Large companies now use the Netherlands for a tax haven...
Now, as a deficit-strapped Europe raises retirement ages and taxes on the working class,
The Netherlands’ comes under strict scrutiny for it's important role as a $13 trillion
part of a global corporate tax-avoiding network.
Taxing agreements...
Under such agreements, multinational companies agree to leave a tiny amount of income in the Netherlands to be taxed in exchange for being permitted to route profits through the country. This remainder left for the revenue authorities in the Netherlands is known to tax planners as “the Dutch Turn.”
The poor pay more while big corporate giants like Google, Merk and Dell and enjoy
tax avoidance through a series of complicated tax schemes.
Keep in mind nothing the large companies is doing is illegal.
It opens a discussion about tax havens for the world's largest corporations.
http://bloom.bg/USC0fb
Dandy Jack!