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Chancellor Christian Kern: ‘Every Viennese cafe, every sausage stand pays more tax in Austria than a multinational corporation.’ Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Chancellor Christian Kern: ‘Every Viennese cafe, every sausage stand pays more tax in Austria than a multinational corporation.’ Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Amazon and Starbucks 'pay less tax than a sausage stand', Austria says

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Centre-left politician also criticises Google and Facebook and complains that EU states with low-tax regimes have lured multinationals

Multinational companies including Amazon and Starbucks pay less tax in Austria than one of the country’s tiny sausage stands, the republic’s centre-left chancellor lamented in an interview published on Friday.

Chancellor Christian Kern, head of the Social Democrats and of the centrist coalition government, also criticised internet giants Google and Facebook, saying that if they paid more tax subsidies for print media could increase.

“Every Viennese cafe, every sausage stand pays more tax in Austria than a multinational corporation,” Kern was quoted as saying in an interview with newspaper Der Standard, invoking two potent symbols of the Austrian capital’s food culture.

“That goes for Starbucks, Amazon and other companies,” he said, praising the European Commission’s ruling this week that Apple should pay up to €13bn ($14.5bn) in taxes plus interest to Ireland because a special scheme to route profits through that country was illegal state aid.

Apple has said it will appeal against the ruling, which CEO Tim Cook described as “total political crap”. Google, Facebook and other multinational companies say they follow all tax rules.

Kern criticised EU states with low-tax regimes that have lured multinationals – and come under scrutiny from Brussels. “What Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg or Malta are doing here lacks solidarity towards the rest of the European economy,” he said.

He stopped short of saying that Facebook and Google would have to pay more tax but underlined their significant sales in Austria, which he estimated at more than €100m each, and their relatively small numbers of employees – a “good dozen” for Google and “allegedly even fewer” for Facebook.

“They massively suck up the advertising volume that comes out of the economy but pay neither corporation tax nor advertising duty in Austria,” said Kern, who became chancellor in May.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Google pays €47m in tax in Ireland on €22bn sales revenue

  • Corporation tax is on a downward trend, says OECD report

  • Apple tax ruling not an attack on US, says European commission chief

  • Private landlords get £9.3bn in housing benefit from taxpayer, says report

  • European commission plans to overhaul how companies report profits

  • London pays almost a third of UK tax, report finds

  • UK overseas territories could be affected by EU tax crackdown

  • The Observer view on global reform of corporate tax

  • Apple tax ruling is not an attack on the United States, says Juncker – video

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