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Multinationals need to pay their fair share of tax and stop shifting their profits

Why are our own politicians selling us out?

An easy way to tell if multinationals are shifting their profits offshore is to compare the operating profit ratio of their operations in Australia verses their worldwide operating profit.

Pfizer for example had an operating profit ratio of just 7% in Australia verse 35% for its worldwide income.

This was on $1.4 billion in sales of which a billion was transferred to Ireland. Australia withholds only 10% on royalties paid to Ireland, despite Ireland having a company tax rate of 12.5%.

A total tax burden of 22.5% which is 7.5% less than the 30% applied to company tax in Australia.

Sending profits to Ireland saves Pfizer 7.5% of a billion dollars or $75 million.

It is therefore clearly obvious that any company will shift profits to Ireland (and numerous other countries with that Australia applies low withholding rates too).

For the life of me I don’t know why the ATO allows this to happen but it needs to stop.

In this clip I call for an operating ratio test to ensure that Multinationals pay their fair share of tax here in Australia.

Senate on 24/06/2024

Statements by Senators

Taxation

Senator RENNICK (Queensland) (13:30): I rise this afternoon to speak about Australia’s transfer pricing arrangements in regard to taxation. In particular I want to focus on two companies whose figures have just been released. One is Facebook, who earned $1.34 billion in revenue here in Australia recently and made only a five per cent operating profit. In other words, for every dollar they earned they transferred 95 per cent of those profits offshore. When I read that, I went and looked up their SEC filing in the New York Stock Exchange, only to see that their worldwide profit ratio was 40 per cent. You have to ask yourself why it is that Australia is only earning one-eighth of its worldwide income. The other company I’d like to refer to is Netflix. They earned $1.1 billion here in Australia and transferred 92 per cent of their profits offshore. I looked up their consolidated worldwide account figures, and their overall operating profit was 21 per cent. The question we have to ask ourselves is: why are we allowing big, foreign tech multinationals to shift so much profit offshore, rather than ensuring that they keep the same amount, or at least a similar amount, of operating profit here in Australia as what they do across their worldwide set of accounts?

The tax office has thin cap arrangements in place. For those of you who aren’t familiar with that, thin capitalisation is when they have a worldwide gearing ratio that basically says multinationals cannot load up too much debt in Australia, and that debt is pretty much limited to their worldwide debt ratio. I’m calling on the tax office to have a similar arrangement in regard to profit: if a multinational company makes 40 per cent profit worldwide, for example, then 40 per cent—or a very similar amount—should be retained here in Australia.

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Thank you,

Gerard