Coca-Cola Vietnam finally
pays tax after claiming losses for 20 years
This photo shows a Vietnamese dealer arranging Coca-Cola
bottles in Ho Chi Minh City.
The Vietnamese arm of U.S. soft drink giant Coca-Cola has paid
its 2014 corporate tax, worth some US$20 million, for the first time in two
decades due to losses, according to a report the firm submitted to Ho Chi
Minh City authorities in May.
The taxable profit of the company in 2014 was $16.6
million, more than double the purported $7 million in 2013, according to the
report on the investment, business and tax obligations of Coca-Cola Vietnam,
the content of which has just been made available.
Also in 2014, Coca-Cola invested $210 million in
business expansion in Vietnam, creating new jobs for 2,200 local employees
and 22,000 indirect employees working for its supply chain in the country.
By the end of 2012, Coca-Cola Vietnam had continuously suffered
losses after re-entering Vietnam in 1994, according to the Ho Chi Minh City
Tax Department.
The information has caught the attention of the public
and local media, as this is the first time Coca-Cola Vietnam has announced
that it has paid tax after claiming losses of VND3.77 trillion ($169.5
million) over the past years.
The losses, at the end of 2012, exceeded the initial
investment of nearly VND3 trillion ($135 million), according to the municipal
tax department.
The tax payment was made after reports surfaced of a
suspected transfer-pricing case occurring at foreign-invested enterprises,
including Coca-Cola Vietnam, according to local news websiteVnEconomy.
However, Vietnamese authorities said they have no
evidence of the transfer-pricing practice taking place at Coca-Cola Vietnam,
according to the newswire.
During the Global Investment Forum in Hanoi in
September, Minister of Planning and Investment Bui Quang Vinh said Vietnam
cannot accuse foreign firms of committing transfer pricing with no evidence
in hand, news website VnExpress reported.
“We cannot simply say Coca-Cola is committing
transfer-pricing since they have consecutively claimed losses while
continuing to expand in Vietnam over the past years,” VnExpress quoted
Minister Vinh as saying.
Coca-Cola had planned to continue expanding in Vietnam,
and pledged to make profits, the official added.
The firm made its debut in Vietnam in 1960, and
re-entered the Southeast Asian country in February 1994.
TUOI
TRE NEWS
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Thứ Năm, 22 tháng 10, 2015
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