Italy is demanding Google pay over EUR 200 million ($218 million or roughly Rs. 1,486 crores) in back taxes following an inquiry into its tax arrangements by the financial police, a judicial source said Thursday.
The technology giant is accused of failing to declare EUR 100 million in income and pay 200 million euros in royalty taxes, the source said.
Corporate
income tax in Italy currently stands at 27.50 percent, putting the total amount due at EUR 227.5 million.
The claim comes against a backdrop of mounting controversy over the tax arrangements of multinational groups who use cross-border corporate structures to reduce their tax bills, sometimes with the help of potentially illegal 'sweetheart' deals.
Google Italia is part of the company's European operation which is headquartered in Ireland, a country with one of the lowest levels of corporation tax in the European Union.
Italy's move follows the striking of a controversial deal in Britain last week which saw the Internet mammoth agree to fork out over EUR 172 million in back taxes - an amount scoffed at by the opposition as an effective tax rate of three percent.
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