Amazon pays just $2.2M in tax in UK despite surge in profits

FILE - In this Friday, July 27, 2018 file photo, the logo for Amazon is displayed on a screen at the Nasdaq MarketSite. Amazon is facing criticism after its British tax bill fell despite a big jump in sales and profits. Records show Amazon U.K. Services Ltd. faced a 2017 tax bill of 4.6 million pounds ($6 million) but paid 1.7 million pounds ($2.2 million), deferring the rest. Its pre-tax profits for the same period were 72.4 million, almost triple the previous year's 24.3 million. Amazon said Friday, Aug. 3 that it pays "all taxes required in the U.K. and every country where we operate." (AP Photo/Richard Drew, file)
FILE - In this Friday, July 27, 2018 file photo, the logo for Amazon is displayed on a screen at the Nasdaq MarketSite. Amazon is facing criticism after its British tax bill fell despite a big jump in sales and profits. Records show Amazon U.K. Services Ltd. faced a 2017 tax bill of 4.6 million pounds ($6 million) but paid 1.7 million pounds ($2.2 million), deferring the rest. Its pre-tax profits for the same period were 72.4 million, almost triple the previous year's 24.3 million. Amazon said Friday, Aug. 3 that it pays "all taxes required in the U.K. and every country where we operate." (AP Photo/Richard Drew, file)

LONDON (AP) - Amazon is facing criticism after its British tax bill fell to a mere $2.2 million despite a big jump in sales and profits.

Records show Amazon U.K. Services Ltd. faced a 2017 tax bill of $6 million but paid the lower sum, deferring the rest.

Its pre-tax profits for the period were $94.1 million, almost triple the previous year's $31.6 million. Revenue rose to $2.5 billion, from $1.9 billion.

The low tax bill is due partly to the way the European Union works, where multinationals have their tax base in one country, often with a very-low tax regime. Earnings from around the bloc are registered in that country - a system called profit-shifting - which means companies like Amazon end up paying very little tax in many countries where they have significant operations.

Amazon is one of a group of multinationals that the EU has accused of arranging unusually advantageous tax deals with the EU country they are based in.

In Amazon's case, that is tiny Luxembourg. The EU ruled in October last year that Luxembourg gave illegal tax benefits to Amazon worth around 250 million euros. Amazon paid four times less tax than local companies, it said.

The EU estimates that governments lose $58 billion-$81 billion a year in tax revenue due to multinationals' ability to report the bulk of their earnings in one EU state.

Meanwhile, brick-and-mortar retailers say they struggle to compete with online giants that use such loopholes to lower their bill.

Amazon said Friday that it pays "all taxes required in the U.K. and every country where we operate." The decrease in its tax payment was partly due to shares payments to staff, which were counted as a cost and deducted from profits.

Amazon UK Services employs about 20,000 people and operates the facilities which store, process and post products to customers in Britain.

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