Their tax returns would likely win the Booker prize for fiction
PWC - Government floats loosening ATO secrecy on money-laundering, takeovers
The companies that won millions from the government and paid $0 in tax
Spotlight on corporate tax avoidance
- Without minimising the need to ensure transfer pricing for multi nationals is fair, good on some of the companies for at least mentioning other taxes they paid. The unsophisticated attempt to sensationalise this should have been met with a response from all the companies that they paid $W PAYG Withholding, $X GST, $Y Payroll tax and $Z FBT. And shame on David Pocock for his comments on this. He said he wanted to do politics differently, but here he is stirring up uninformed outrage to garner votes at the upcoming election.
Comment by Adrienne Sykes.
How can this be...unbelievable...we need to vote more Independents in so this sort of rorting can be stopped...if the other mob win the election this year it will be even worse...Comment by Dan O'Brien.
The Dishonour Roll Board.. just deem them . Their tax returns would likely win the Booker prize for fiction .Comment by tony estevez.
Embarrassing that some of our politicians don’t understand the taxation system. No one could be surprised that PWC didn’t pay tax for the year they nearly went bankrupt. Qantas has huge carry forward losses from the pandemic which is less about the taxation system but more about the outrageous bailout of its shareholders when like tens of thousands of other businesses that were allowed to go broke.Comment by Fred Bloggs.
Good work from the ATO, breaking a record like that would be no small feat.It is a shame the government cant prioritise work to companies that actually do pay tax? Should be part of the lengthy tender evaluation processes that are done, time and time again.Reply by Fred Bloggs.
yes, they manipulate the tax system to not pay sufficient tax. Their whole focus is on profit and tax avoidance.Reply by Neil Watson.
As mine would be!
The Australian companies paying the most – and least – tax
Qantas, Star Entertainment, Toll, and Insurance Australia Group paid no company tax in Australia in 2022-23, with huge revenues from miners and oil and gas companies helping the Australian Taxation Office secure a record $100 billion haul.
Tech giants including Google Australia, Facebook and Apple each had significantly smaller tax bills, despite billions in revenue. Apple paid $142 million in tax, after recording $12.6 billion in total income, ahead of Google’s $124 million bill, based on $2 billion in income.
Social media giant Facebook paid $38 million in tax on $1.3 billion in total income. Online retail giant Amazon paid $125 million based on $6.6 billion in total income.
The report showed that 1200 large companies paid no tax. Companies can legitimately avoid an income tax bill due to accounting losses and tax offsets. Qantas said their result was caused by $7 billion in losses during the COVID-19 pandemic. The airline has used up carry forward credits and resumed paying tax last financial year.
Media corporations including News Australia and Seven West Media also paid no tax.
Resources giants including Rio Tinto, BHP and Fortescue paid a combined $43 billion, while additional scrutiny on tax arrangements for oil and gas companies boosted revenue to the federal budget through $11.6 billion in tax.
Chevron Australia, Woodside and Chevron were among the top 10 payers.
Chevron paid $4.3 billion in tax on $24.2 billion of revenue, after spending more than $80 billion with partners on the Gorgon and Wheatstone natural gas facilities in Western Australia.
“Our $4.2 billion company income tax payment for 2022 highlights the strong earnings we achieved in that year through high reliability and production achievements by our facilities, combining with market conditions,” managing director Mark Hatfield said.
BHP paid more than $7 billion in tax through its two companies, BHP Group and BHP Iron Ore, which have a combined revenue of $70 billion. Together, this was more than Rio Tinto’s $5.7 billion in tax from $47.3 billion in revenue.
Glencore paid $4.7 billion in tax from about $42 billion in revenue. Its holdings company paid no tax on $12.2 billion in revenue.
Mineral Resources, the company founded by Chris Ellison, paid no tax from revenues of $5.6 billion. The Perth-headquartered diversified miner admitted this week it has been investigating a tax evasion scheme involving Mr Ellison for more than two years.
A spokesman said MinRes indirectly paid about $240 million through the company’s interest in the Mt Marion Lithium company. MinRes used franking credits to reduce its tax bill.
IAG, which owns insurers NRMA and CGU, had revenue of $15.8 billion in the year but paid no tax, ahead of AGL Energy with $13 billion.
Australia Post had an income of $8.9 billion but paid no tax due to an annual loss of $200 million.
Commonwealth Bank, Westpac and National Australia Bank were all in the top 10, paying a combined $8.2 billion in tax.
Nine Entertainment, which owns The Australian Financial Review, had more than $3.3 billion in total income and paid $88 million in tax.
Supermarket giant Coles paid $433 million in tax but was again behind rival Woolworths, which paid $750 million.
Wesfarmers, the corporate giant which operates Officeworks, Kmart and Bunnings, paid $968 million in tax, from total revenue of $42.5 billion.
The report revealed a 16.7 per cent increase in corporate income tax, as commodity prices and improved compliance with tax laws pushed up the total. Falling commodity prices are expected to stop a record run of corporate tax receipts as soon as next year.
The number of companies paying petroleum resource rent tax remained steady on the previous year. But there was a slight decrease in PRRT revenue from $1.99 billion to $1.86 billion.
Santos, Woodside, Cooper Energy, Esso Australia and Mitsui were among PRRT payees.
Woodside boss Meg O’Neill said the company was proud to be Australia’s fifth-largest taxpayer.
“When Woodside performs, Australia benefits, a fact clearly reflected by the more than $21 billion in Australian taxes, royalties and levies we’ve contributed since 2011.”
Ms O’Neill was appointed to the board of the Business Council of Australia on Friday, replacing former KPMG chairman Alison Kitchen.
Minerals Council of Australia boss Tania Constable said the 2022-23 report was the second consecutive year her members had paid more in tax than all other industries combined.
“In 2022-23, the mining sector not only led the nation in tax contributions, increasing its payments from the previous year but also paid a combined $74.6 billion in company tax and royalties, including $31.5 billion in royalties alone,” she said.
“The sector accounted for approximately 44 per cent of tax paid by large corporate entities, according to the ATO report.”
Corporate Tax Association boss Michelle de Niesedefended big business, including those not required to pay company tax. She said the majority of corporates wanted to pay their full tax obligations.
“For those few in the minority that do not, the public can be confident that they will feel the full weight of comprehensive and intensive review from the ATO, and the application of the toughest tax integrity rules in the developed world.”
Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones said the government and the ATO had worked hard to “claw back” taxes owed by some of the biggest companies.
“The ATO’s work is crucial in the fight to hold big companies to account. Our government will always ensure it has the resources necessary to retrieve what is owed so we can fund services the community needs,” he said.