In recent years, the European Commission has made a name for itself by going head to head with American tech companies in tax evasion and antitrust cases. After Microsoft had been entangled in legal battles with the Commission for the better part of the 21st century and Apple was ordered to pay €13 billion in back taxes to the Irish government in 2016 (which didn’t want the money and eventually was forced to collect it), Google has become the prime target of the EU’s antitrust watchdog in recent years.
After having been fined €2.4 billion ($2.7b) for anticompetitive behavior related to Google Shopping in 2017, the search giant was slapped with a record-breaking €4.3 billion ($5.1b) fine last summer for antitrust violations related to its mobile operating system Android. While that easily trumps any other antitrust fine the European Commission has handed out over the years, Google’s full-year earnings report, published last week, reveals how significant that fine really was. As the following chart shows, the $5.1 billion penalty exceeded the amount of income tax that Google’s parent company Alphabet had to pay for the entire year.
Thanks to the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Google’s effective tax rate dropped to 12 percent last year, enabling the company to post a record profit of $30.7 billion last year, even after accounting for the $5.1 billion fine which is still under appeal.
source: statista
Ask me anything
Explore related questions