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Apple tells EU tax panel it ‘pays every cent’ due in Ireland

“Apple Inc., facing a European Union probe into its fiscal affairs in Ireland, told a panel of EU lawmakers Tuesday it pays all taxes due in the nation and doesn’t get an unfair advantage compared with other companies there,” Stephanie Bodoni reports for Bloomberg.

“Cathy Kearney, a vice-president of the iPhone maker’s European operations in Cork, Ireland, said the company isn’t getting unfair state aid but will remain ‘committed to Ireland” whatever the outcome of the EU case,” Bodoni reports. “‘We feel that we’ve paid every cent of tax that is due in Ireland,’ Kearney said at the European Parliament in Brussels. ‘We don’t feel that there has been state aid involved and I suppose we look forward to that outcome happening at the end of the day and being vindicated in that way. I would say that the Irish government also agrees with that view.'”

Bodoni reports, “Apple’s tax affairs in Ireland and Amazon.com Inc.’s arrangements in Luxembourg are slated to be next in the firing line as the European Commission takes aim at so-called tax rulings it says may be unfair subsidies.”

Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: Apple has been perfectly consistent on this matter throughout this witch hunt.

There was no special deal that we cut with Ireland. We simply followed the laws in the country over the 35 years that we have been in Ireland. If the question is, was there ever a ‘quid pro quo’ that we were trying to strike with the Irish government – that was never the case. We’ve always been very transparent with the Irish government that we wanted to be a good corporate citizen… If countries change the tax laws, we will abide by the new laws and we will pay taxes according to those laws. – Apple CFO Luca Maestri, September 2014

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