EU General Court rules Apple does not have to pay €13B in taxes to Ireland
Back in 2016, Apple was accused by the European Commission of receiving illegal tax cuts in Ireland. Cupertino was then forced to pay the amount of €13 billion ($15 billion) which was accumulated during the 2003-2014 period during which it allegedly paid a reduced corporate tax of just 1% on its profits instead of Ireland's 12.5% corporate tax.
#EUGeneralCourt annuls the decision taken by the @EU_Commission regarding the Irish #TaxRulings in favour of @Apple #Apple #EUCommission #StateAid pic.twitter.com/KoF6r1n82S
— EU Court of Justice (@EUCourtPress) July 15, 2020
Apple has since appealed the ruling and now the General Court of the European Union has revoked the EU Commission’s decision, effectively ruling in Apple’s favor. The court decision states that the EU Commission failed to provide actual proof that Apple took advantage of the lowered corporate tax. The EU Commission can appeal the ruling in a 14-day timeframe.
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Reader comments
- So this was okay or
- 16 Jul 2020
- mX@
Paradise Papers: Apple's secret tax bolthole revealed: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-41889787
- Real.Talk
- 16 Jul 2020
- pk$
I'm tired of hearing the such generic and vague " EU " term... How about being precise in referencing the correct term you intended on using by stating Europe or European Union instead? Hope this'll help you learn to be ...
- Anonymous
- 16 Jul 2020
- fIP
agreed, even small business also create jobs so why the difference?