So the tax on the 49m fine is 49m?bhallg2k wrote:I'm far from worked up over it, but this does effectively nullify the penalty levied against them by the FIA. It's also a fine example of how tax laws around the world are very often needlessly skewed in favor of business interests.
Let's say McLaren has a hypothetical £50 million tax liability. They would have that liability with or without the FIA's fine; in other words, £50 million is coming out of McLaren's coffers no matter what. But, since the team has been afforded a deduction based upon the £49 million fine, McLaren's tax liability is effectively reduced to £1 million, and the FIA penalty is rendered moot, because, as I said, that money had to be spent regardless.wesley123 wrote:[...]
I really dont understand how people can say it would nullify their punishment. It still costs them 49m, so how does it nullify this? As a matter of fact it would cost McLaren possibly more as they'd have to declare this, and they have to go over a whole process as this isnt something that happened last year.
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Your sarcasm is well taken, but: (a) while there is obviously a difference between tax avoidance and tax deduction, the context of my statement was that both are legitimate means to minimize tax liability. Given this context, please explain what you meant when you made the rather patronizing observation that there is a difference between one and the other. Before you offhandedly shoot something off, be mindful, I'm a corporate finance lawyer who is quite conversant with taxation aspects as well (wierd to be on f1t, right?snoop1050 wrote:theres a difference between tax avoidance and tax write offs...phillippe wrote:There is nothing wrong with structuring your operations in a legally permissible manner that minimizes tax liability. To this end, all multi national corporations have subsidiaries or special purpose vehicles in tax friendly jurisdictions. The article itself mentions it's completely legal. Of course, politicians have an interest in engaging in rhetoric and hysteria over such things. But we aren't politicians, are we?
By the same logic, all F1 drivers who are tax residents of Monte Carlo should be lynched!
maybe the next time a driver gets a fine they will get a tax write off aswell
No, that's not the case as some of these journalists are making it out to be!! Tax is payable on profits not gross income. Which means, whatever you spent (x) to earn, or in connection with earning an income of (y) would be available as a deduction against x. So the tax would be payable only on x-y. The question is whether the 49 million would go towards y for McLaren's income that year. The loss to the exchequer would only be z% (being the rate of corporate tax in the UK) of x-y. So, for the exchequer to to suffer a loss of 49 million, the rate of corporate tax in the UK should be 100%snoop1050 wrote:i thought a tax deduction of 49mil meant they have to pay 49mil less in taxes ?
HMRC are appealing the decision apparently
Correct regarding irrelevance of FIA's motivations or violations by other teams. Incorrect, I'm afraid as far as UK taxpayers subsidizing Mclaren; please see my previous post.bhallg2k wrote:The motivation behind the FIA's penalty is immaterial here, as are the alleged transgressions of other teams. I think what matters is the fact that the U.K. has pretty much subsidized McLaren's penalty with taxpayer money.
So true on all counts!wesley123 wrote:So the tax on the 49m fine is 49m?bhallg2k wrote:I'm far from worked up over it, but this does effectively nullify the penalty levied against them by the FIA. It's also a fine example of how tax laws around the world are very often needlessly skewed in favor of business interests.
I really dont understand how people can say it would nullify their punishment. It still costs them 49m, so how does it nullify this? As a matter of fact it would cost McLaren possibly more as they'd have to declare this, and they have to go over a whole process as this isnt something that happened last year.
Apart from that, since when are things like these not tax applicable? In F1 might be a penalty, in the regular world it is just an company booking 49m to another company.
C'mon, these are the basics of bussiness, and I dont understand the fuss about it
To use your example, it's more advantageous to pay taxes on £x - £50 million - £y than it is to be taxed on £x - £y. Were that not true, we wouldn't be talking about this right now.phillippe wrote:[...]
Incorrect, I'm afraid as far as UK taxpayers subsidizing Mclaren; please see my previous post.
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The law is not always ethical, as we well know here in the US.bhallg2k wrote:To use your example, it's more advantageous to pay taxes on £x - £50 million - £y than it is to be taxed on £x - £y. Were that not true, we wouldn't be talking about this right now.phillippe wrote:[...]
Incorrect, I'm afraid as far as UK taxpayers subsidizing Mclaren; please see my previous post.
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What McLaren has done, and it's perfectly legit within the context of this discussion, is claim industrial espionage as a capital investment. Does that seem fair, especially given that someone must pay for that deduction at some point either directly or as a deficit?
It's a matter of ethics, not law. Though, I personally think both are questionable in this case.
The motivation is not immaterial at all. If Max hadn't taken "$5million for the offense and $95million for Ron being a twat" (I think that was the quote) then McLaren probably wouldn't have bothered to do this. $5million would have been paid and forgotten about.bhallg2k wrote:The motivation behind the FIA's penalty is immaterial here, as are the alleged transgressions of other teams. I think what matters is the fact that the U.K. has pretty much subsidized McLaren's penalty with taxpayer money.