Amazon makes French tax deal as tide turns against web giants

AFP  |  Paris 

retailer said today that it has settled a major claim in and will start declaring all its earnings in the country in a response to building European pressure on the digital giants. did not reveal how much it had paid over a French claim for nearly 200 million euros ($249 million) covering the period from 2006 to 2010. It is one of several American in the line of fire in over their tax-avoidance strategies, which often sees them route their income through low- nations -- in Amazon's case, French has proposed a new mechanism for taxing US tech companies that would take into account the volume of sales generated in each European country, rather than on the profits that are booked through low-jurisdictions. announced a similar settlement deal with in December, paying 100 million euros to settle an investigation into suspected evasion from 2011 to 2015, while also agreeing to declare its income locally. In 2012, revealed that it had been hit with a 198 -million-euro bill in for back taxes, interest and penalties relating to income spread between different jurisdictions. At the time, the company had said it disagreed with the French assessment and vowed to "vigorously" fight it. In its statement Monday, said it had created a French subsidiary for its European operations in August 2015, "with all revenues, expenses, profits and taxes due now accounted for in " The retailer also said it had invested over 2 billion euros in since 2010, creating more than 5,500 jobs. European officials have vowed to make the digital giants known as GAFA -- Google, Amazon, and -- pay a greater share of their taxes in the countries where they earn their profits. Under current EU law, companies based outside the bloc can declare their earnings from across the 28-nation market in a single country. That has led them to pick low-nations like Ireland, the or -- depriving other member states of revenues, even though they may account for a bigger share of the earnings. The says such rules cost governments around the world as much as $240 billion (193 billion euros) a year in lost revenue, according to a 2015 estimate. On Sunday, EU Pierre Moscovici said he would unveil by the end of March a plan to "create a consensus and an electroshock" on taxing digital revenues.

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First Published: Mon, February 05 2018. 20:55 IST