Corporate tax laws are hugely complicated and not easy to digest but I think the average person in the street will arrive at the same conclusion that Barclays only paying a paltry sum of £113m in corporation taxes on record profits of £11.6bn is unbelievably out of order.
Offshore banking is what ties
all of this together. It allows banks/corporations/multinationals/wealthy individual scum to:
Move their money offshore and avoid paying taxes
Set up sham companies that don't even need any incorporation details so they cannot be investigated
Operate in a country where any investigation of company details is essentially illegal (even though there is nothing to investigate)
Decide where they make their profit (which is what gets taxed) - invariably in a country where there is no corporation tax
And loads and loads of other stuff. The entire financial crisis can in part be blamed on offshore banking - nobody knew what was going on in those jurisdictions.
I agree that corporate tax law is hugely complicated, but I think there are ways it can be presented and tied together to reveal who we really need to be fighting - unaccountable offshore financial capital.
I think it is fucking disgusting, and the more I learn about how multinationals
actually operate, in terms of setting up companies, accounting, etc etc, the more deeply I am disgusted.