Big Tech given slap on wrist for tax avoidance in Korea

(Courtesy of Getty Images)

Global Big Tech companies such as Google, Meta and Netflix have paid a pittance in taxes in South Korea and were fined as little as one-ten-thousandth of their revenue in penalties against tax audit avoidance, showed document obtained by a People Power Party lawmaker.

In 2023, South Korea’s National Tax Service (NTX) imposed only 66 million won ($49,000) in penalties against two tax dodging cases involving global Big Tech firm, according to the document prepared for a regular parliamentary inspection. Song Eonseog, the ruling party member, released the data on Monday.

The penalties are down 96%, compared with the NTX’s levy against global Big Tech in 116 tax audit-related cases in 2019.

Global Big Tech companies were known to have reaped several hundreds of million dollars in Asia’s fourth-largest economy annually.

But some of them refused to submit tax reports to the NTX on the excuse that they are only accessible by their global headquarters, or they transferred their earnings in royalties to their head offices, according to tax officials.

Under the current Korean law for national taxes, a company refusing to submit tax reports for audits is subject to a penalty of 5 million won to 50 million won. Such penalties are also imposed to those not responding to tax-related questions or examination.

But a South Korean court’s ruling in 2021 that limits the NTX’s penalty imposition to a maximum 50 million won per tax audit case significantly reduced tax evasion penalties on foreign companies.
 

Big Tech firms also challenge taxes by taking legal action, in which their win rate against the NTS reached 80% in 2023.

In 2023, Netflix, the world’s largest streaming company, paid meagre 10.7 billion won in corporate taxes in South Korea on revenue of 773.3 billion won.

Google’s tax payment was 17.0 billion won last year after raking in 344.9 billion won in revenue the same year.

Lee Yin-Seon, another ruling party lawmaker, argued the IT behemoth downsized its Korean revenue by transferring them to its Singapore-based regional office. She estimated Google’s revenue in South Korea at more than 12 trillion won last year.

(Courtesy of Reuters)

Facebook’s South Korean unit paid 4.9 billion on in taxes in 2023 against revenue of 70.1 billion won in revenue.

The document obtained by lawmaker Song also showed the NTX was forced to sharply cut the penalty it imposed on an unidentified global platform company for alleged tax avoidance to 20 million won ($15,000) from several million dollars.

Another global IT company was also charged with just several tens of thousand dollars in penalties for not complying with domestic tax laws. It turned down both on-site and zoom interview requests by NTX officials in relation to a tax audit.

Song is preparing to propose a bill to tighten tax regulations by introducing a mandatory charge against companies refusing to submit tax reports, or not cooperating with tax inspections.

By So-Ram Jung

ram@hankyung.com
 

Yeonhee Kim edited this article

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