Vodafone cited in UK tax avoidance

Vodafone is facing another tax scandal after it was claimed that the Group avoided paying  corporate taxes on its UK profits.

US-based newspaper, The Sunday Times reported that its investigations revealed Vodafone used a network of offshore companies, mainly based in low-tax Luxembourg, to erase its tax liability, and actually claimed a tax refund from the government worth £4 million (US$6.2 million).

As a result, Vodafone’s tax bill fell from £140 million in 2010 to effectively zero in 2011 although adjusted profits rose by 16% over the year to £402 million.

A Vodafone UK spokesperson was quoted as saying the tax bill was offset against its network investment, which rose to £575 million during the year, adding that “there are tax reliefs for capital investment and interest costs in the UK, which applied in this case.”

“We paid £14 billion into the public purse worldwide in 2011 if one includes payroll and sales taxes as well as fees for radio spectrum,” he said.

Vodafone had earlier been criticized in the UK over a £1.2 billion tax dispute, which saw the government settle for a figure lower than some commentators thought the company should have paid to the state.

Meanwhile, Vodafone was also involved in another huge tax row in India, where the government tried to get Vodafone, as the buyer of Hutchison’s shares in Essar to pay taxes, but Vodafone insisted only the seller, Hutchison, would have been paid taxes, but for the Indian tax laws, which freed offshore companies from such taxes.

The matter went to court and Vodafone won, but the Indian government has since been trying to pass a new law with a retrospective clause that would enjoin Vodafone to still pay those taxes, and Vodafone has also threatened to take the matter to the international courts.

In Ghana, Vodafone has actually been lauded by the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) as one of the highest corporate taxpayers even though the company is yet to start making cash profits.

Vodafone Ghana CEO Kyle Whitehill recently disclosed that the company does not ship “a cedi” out of Ghana but has reinvested every single pesewa it has made in Ghana into the economy.

Reliable sources at Vodafone Ghana had however hinted that the company expects to start making real cash profits from this year.

By Samuel Dowuona

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