Try GOLD - Free

Low Taxes at Dozens of Firms in Spotlight After Apple Ruling

AppleMagazine

|

September 09,2016

It turns out some wealthy companies are just like some wealthy hedge fund managers: They’re taxed at far lower rates than nearly everyone else.

Low Taxes at Dozens of Firms in Spotlight After Apple Ruling

Whether or not Apple used illegal breaks to pay virtually no taxes in Europe over 11 years, as regulators there contend and the company denies, the order last week that it pay billions in back taxes highlights a worrisome divide among the world’s biggest corporations: Some pay relatively little taxes, others a lot.

Taxes paid in the U.S. and abroad by tech companies like Apple amounted to 24 percent of their profits in the 10 years through 2014, according to a Credit Suisse report. Energy companies paid 41 percent, nearly double.

Experts say a tax system that divides companies so starkly into winners and losers raises issues of fairness, along with questions about the wisdom of using tax codes to shape corporate behavior. It may also pose a danger to investors: Are companies that have boosted earnings by shifting headquarters abroad and other maneuvers vulnerable to a tax-collector crackdown?

Just which ones are vulnerable is difficult to know because tax rules are so complicated, but there is a lot of money at stake.

According to a May report by the research firm R.G. Associates, 78 of the biggest U.S. companies - from tech stars Facebook and eBay to glass maker Corning and food giant Kraft Heinz would have earned at least 15 percent less last year without the benefit of overseas tax rates far below that in the U.S. Stocks of each of those four companies are up more than 20 percent in the past year.

“If you have a company that moves profits and operations around the world in a snakelike fashion, you don’t know if they’re going to wind up in the regulatory cross hairs,” says Jack Ciesielski, head of R.G. Associates. “The European Union is getting much better at policing this.”

MORE STORIES FROM AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

DOES FAST CHARGING DAMAGE YOUR PHONE'S BATTERY? EXPERTS EXPLAIN WHAT REALLY HAPPENS OVER TIME

As smartphones adopt increasingly powerful charging systems—some now reaching 100 watts or more—a recurring question continues to circulate among users and engineers alike: does fast charging harm a phone's battery in the long run? Recent findings suggest the answer is more nuanced than simple yes or no, depending largely on how the technology is implemented and how consistently it’s used.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE'S QUIET SATELLITE STRATEGY IS STARTING TO LOOK LIKE A LONG-TERM CONNECTIVITY PLAN

Apple's gradual expansion into satellite technology—once viewed as a niche safety initiative—is beginning to resemble a long-term connectivity roadmap that could redefine how future iPhones, Watches, and even Mac devices communicate.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

APPLE DEVELOPS NEXT-GENERATION SATELLITE FEATURES FOR IPHONE CONNECTIVITY EXPANSION

Apple is advancing its satellite communication technology with a new wave of features designed to expand iPhone connectivity beyond conventional cellular networks.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

OOKLA UNVEILS SPEEDTEST PULSE, A NEW NETWORK DIAGNOSTIC DEVICE FOR PROFESSIONAL AND ENTERPRISE USE

Ookla, the company behind the Speedtest platform, has unveiled Speedtest Pulse, a new hardware-based diagnostic system developed to provide continuous network monitoring for service providers, broadcasters, and enterprise infrastructures.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

IPHONE AIR 2 MAY BE DELAYED INDEFINITELY AS APPLE REFOCUSES DEVELOPMENT PRIORITIES

Apple's followup to the lightweight iPhone Air may not arrive on schedule.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

GOOGLE PHOTOS FOR IOS ADDS “HELP ME EDIT” AI FEATURE FOR NATURAL LANGUAGE PHOTO ADJUSTMENTS

Google has begun rolling out its “Help Me Edit” feature on Google Photos for iOS, extending one of its core generative AI tools to Apple devices.

time to read

2 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

IBM ANNOUNCES MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH IN QUANTUM COMPUTING, SIGNALING A NEW PHASE FOR COMMERCIAL APPLICATIONS

IBM has unveiled a significant advancement in quantum computing, one that could accelerate the technology's shift from laboratory research to large-scale industrial use.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

US-CHINA CHIP AND AI COMPETITION SHIFTS TO THE DATA CENTER FRONT

The ongoing technological rivalry between the United States and China has entered a new phase centered on data centers, where both nations are rapidly expanding investments in AI infrastructure, semiconductor design, and cloud computing capacity.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

SURVEY REVEALS AI-GENERATED MUSIC IS NOW VIRTUALLY INDISCERNIBLE FROM HUMAN COMPOSITION

A new study has revealed that listeners can no longer reliably distinguish between human-created music and songs generated entirely by artificial intelligence, highlighting how far machine-learning models have come in replicating musical expression, texture, and emotional tone.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

AppleMagazine

AppleMagazine

ELON MUSK TEASES NEW TESLA OPTIMUS CAPABILITIES IN “ROBOCOP”-LIKE DEMO

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has once again pushed the boundaries of robotics showmanship, teasing a new demonstration of the company's humanoid robot Optimus that drew instant comparisons to the cinematic cyborgs of RoboCop.

time to read

3 mins

November 14, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size