Needless to say that the announcement was greeted with a lot of acceptance and sympathy both by the media and the public. After all, going after the big bucks from those who apply sneaky tricks is only fair. Or is it? I have some mixed feelings though. Is it ethically and morally questionable when the richest companies on earth use every rule in the book to lower and evade taxes? Hell yes. Is it legally wrong?
The thing is, those 'rules in the books' were voted and implemented by... governments. Countries purposely create rules beneficial to global companies just to attract them and set up shop in their country. In fact countries compete heavily amongst themselves to attract business. My own country, Belgium, is no exception. Belgium invented a very interesting rule (when using their own capital for investing in R&D, companies can deduct it from their taxes as if it was a loan) and then went on a global road show to pitch it to multinationals. Of course many saw the benefits (handy way to lower their taxable income). Can you blame them? Other countries have other incentive schemes. And when companies happily apply (of course!) then suddenly they become the bad guys. Again, it is ethically and morally wrong but shouldn't the Commission go after its own members because it is the Member States that created the rules that companies use? But I guess it is more popular to go after business sharks then go after your own members. And then one another point: Commission officials don't pay taxes on their income as us normal mortals have to do. So who are they to speak about socially unacceptable tax evasion?
I came across a website featuring a flying machine that tickled my imagination. I remember as a kid seeing these things in a comic book ('De speelgoedzaaiers'). But here is this company in Perth that is developing them. Have a look:
We Belgians have always been way ahead of the rest :-).
Ok ok ok, just to prove that I do have some sort of self-relativity as well here is Monthy Python about us Belgians:
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