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McDonald’s moves non-US tax HQ to Britain from Luxembourg

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LONDON: McDonald’s will move fiscal headquarters for the majority of its non-US operations to Britain, it said, following an EU crackdown on tax deals struck by multinationals including the fast-food giant. McDonald’s is establishing a new Britain-based holding company to cover royalties from most licensing agreements outside the United States, shifting its tax base from Luxembourg.


The profits will be subject to British tax, McDonald’s said in a statement that was immediately welcomed by the British government, which is under pressure to preserve economic stability as the country prepares to leave the European Union.


Prime Minister Theresa May has pledged to cut corporation tax to 17 per cent by 2020 from the current 20 per cent, prompting warnings by commentators in continental Europe that Britain is planning to become a “tax haven” post-Brexit.


“We welcome continued investment from companies around the world into the UK, particularly where that’s securing growth and increasing jobs,” May’s spokeswoman told reporters at a daily briefing.


Several tech giants including Facebook and Google have announced investment in Britain since the EU referendum in June but some companies, particularly in the finance sector, are considering relocation to continental Europe as a result of the Brexit vote.


McDonald’s made its announcement shortly after a senior official at France’s markets regulator told BBC television that Paris had received inquiries by large international banks with operations in London.


“McDonald’s selected the UK for the location of its new international holding structure because of a significant number of staff based in London working on our international business, language, and connections to other markets,” the company said.


The EU launched a formal investigation in December 2015 into tax deals between the US giant and Luxembourg, saying its preliminary assessment was that they breached state aid rules.


The case against McDonald’s stemmed from a complaint by trade unions and the charity War on Want that accused McDonald’s of avoiding around one billion euros ($1.1 billion) in taxes between 2009 and 2013, by shifting profits from one corporate division to another, and paying no local tax in Luxembourg.


A McDonald’s spokesperson said the restaurant chain “pays a significant amount of corporate taxes”.


From 2011 to 2015, McDonald’s paid more than $2.5 billion in corporate taxes to the EU at an average rate of almost 27 per cent, the spokesperson added.


The move announced on Thursday means McDonald’s will close operations in Geneva.— AFP


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