Dutch Sandwich
A Dutch Sandwich is a tax avoidance strategy that some multinational corporations use to lower their corporate tax liability.[1] The strategy uses payments between related entities in a corporate structure to shift income from a higher-tax country to a lower-tax country.[2]
In a Dutch Sandwich, revenues from sales of a product shipped by an Irish company is booked by a shell company in the Netherlands,[3] taking advantage of generous tax laws there.[4] This is usually the second part of the scheme referred to as the "Double Irish with Dutch Sandwich".[5][6] The remaining profits are transferred directly to Cayman Islands or Bermuda, known as a Bermuda Black Hole.
For example, Google's main operating company is based in Ireland. Google's tax structure involves six territories, resulting in overall payment of just 2.4% tax on all operations outside the United States. To avoid paying income taxes in Ireland, it transfers the profits out of the jurisdiction. Ireland has a high tax on such transfers to a tax haven jurisdiction like Bermuda, so the profits are transferred to the Netherlands, easily done as an EU co-member. From there the profits can be transferred to Bermuda, at little cost, which has no corporate income tax. In 2009, Google reported a gross profit of €5.5bn, but an operating profit of €45m after subtracting "administrative expenses" of €5.467bn. Administrative expenses comprised mainly royalties or a licence fee which Google pays its Bermuda headquarters for the right to operate.[7]
See also
References
- ↑ ‘Dutch Sandwich’ saves Google billions in taxes
- ↑ ‘Double Irish With a Dutch Sandwich’
- ↑ No more “Dutch Sandwich”? The Netherlands reviews its role in tax avoidance
- ↑ Google 2.4% Rate Shows How $60 Billion Is Lost to Tax Loopholes
- ↑ "'Dutch Sandwich' saves Google and many other U.S. companies billions in taxes". MSNBC. 22 October 2010.
- ↑ "Man Making Ireland Tax Avoidance Hub Proves Local Hero"
- ↑ Drucker J. (2010). The Tax Haven That's Saving Google Billions. Business Week.