Google pays 20% tax in UK, senior executive tells MPs

A senior Google executive has told MPs that he understands public anger over reports of the internet giant's tax payments, but insisted it paid tax at 20% like any other company operating in the UK.
Top flight Google exec Matt Brittin is unsure of his annual incomeTop flight Google exec Matt Brittin is unsure of his annual income
Top flight Google exec Matt Brittin is unsure of his annual income

But Matt Brittin came under attack from the chairwoman of an influential House of Commons committee after he told her he did not know how much he was paid.

Public Accounts Committee chairwoman Meg Hillier told the Google president for Europe, the Middle East and Africa that he must have “tin ears” if he did not understand how ordinary taxpayers would be angered by his comments and Google’s £130 million tax settlement with HM Revenue and Customs for 10 years’ operations in the UK.

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As the committee subjected Mr Brittin to a grilling in Westminster, he confirmed to Ms Hillier that Google had made profits of £106 million on revenues of £1.18 billion in the UK in the last 18 months alone, and that 11% of the company’s global sales to customers occurred in the UK.

Ms Hillier told him: “We are here for the taxpayers in Britain. Do you hear the anger and frustration out there that with these huge figures, you settled for a figure of £130 million.”

She demanded four times to be told what Mr Brittin was personally paid, but he responded: “I don’t have the figure but I will happily provide it.”

Ms Hillier responded: “You don’t know what you get paid? ... Out there, taxpayers, our constituents, are very angry, they live in a different world clearly to the world you live in, if you can’t even tell us what you are paid.”