This is a massive win for Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager’s crusade against “aggressive tax planning,” mostly targeting U.S. multinationals, since previous cases have faltered in the European Union courts.
The Apple case was part of a slew of probes aimed at how countries like Ireland and Luxembourg offered favorable tax treatment to hook the European headquarters of multinational firms.
Today’s ruling focuses on how two of the tech giant’s units were taxed in Ireland for handling intellectual property licenses for the company’s sales outside of North America. The General Court ruled in 2020 that the Commission was wrong to say those units had been given “selective advantage,” effectively a tax benefit not offered to others and thus unfair state aid.
Apple’s battles with the EU have widened with the company fined €1.8 billion earlier this year over its app store rules. It is now also facing three investigations over its non-compliance with digital competition rules.
Vestager said in June that Apple leaves a “sad aftertaste of illegal behavior.” The tax case alone “shows that Apple contributes very, very little when it comes to taxes, in the jurisdictions where they make their profits,” she said.
Apple said in 2017 that it had an effective tax rate of 21 percent on foreign earnings. The Commission said its effective tax rate on European profits was 1 percent in 2003 and 0.005 percent in 2014.