Saturday, March 28, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Watch: Google Boss Asked 'What Do You Get Paid?' By UK Lawmakers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2016 10:52 AM
    LONDON — A British parliamentary committee has grilled Google's president of European operations, questioning in blunt terms whether the Internet giant had paid its fair share of taxes.
     
    The hearing Thursday comes amid public anger over a tax settlement the company made with U.K. authorities. Meg Hillier, who chairs the Public Accounts Committee, captured the mood when she accused Google's Matt Brittin of having "tin ears" to the complaints about the 130 million pound ($186 million) deal for back taxes in Britain.
     
    Brittin insisted he did understand public anger, and said Google had paid taxes at 20 per cent like other companies.
     
    But he invoked Hillier's fury when he said he didn't know his own pay package.
     
    "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," Hillier countered.
     
    She said it was a "PR disaster" for Google to announce its tax deal just as British people were doing their tax returns and "sweating over a little bit of bank interest and getting it in on time."
     
     
    The session tapped into a public zeitgeist of fury over multinational corporations that operate in Britain but have tax bases elsewhere. Britain is revising its international tax rules.
     
    It's also a reflection of the explosion of tech companies. Brittin said Google's workforce in Britain had grown from 160 to more than 4,000 over the 10-year period covered by the settlement. Some 5,000-plus are employed in Ireland.
     
    He insisted the figure came at the end of a tax audit that took six years to complete and that no "deal" had been struck with Treasury chief George Osborne, who had described the settlement as a "victory" for the government.
     
    The announcement, Brittin said, had occurred because the settlement would soon be made public in the company's accounts. He defended the company in an op-ed piece for the Telegraph newspaper and insisted there was no "sweetheart deal" with the government.
     
    "We agree that the international tax system needs reform. We have long been in favour of simpler, clearer rules, because it is important not only to pay the right amount of tax, but to be seen to be paying the right amount," he said, writing in the Daily Telegraph on Wednesday. "But changes to the tax system are not Google's call. Reform must come from governments, not from the companies who are subject to their rules."

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Google must amend search results upon request: EU court

    Google must amend search results upon request: EU court
    Google must comply with European laws on privacy and amend some search results, a top European Union (EU) court ruled Tuesday.

    Google must amend search results upon request: EU court

    Music to ears: Books that you can listen

    Music to ears: Books that you can listen
     What if you can listen to the emotions of your favourite characters in a novel in the form of a soothing music?

    Music to ears: Books that you can listen

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring
    Not been able to get good night's sleep owing to snoring or sleep apnea? This 3D 'duckbill' device can prevent dangerous pauses in breath during sleep and stops snoring.

    3D-printed mouthpiece can prevent snoring

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?
    Your clothes could soon turn into devices that could power your medical monitors, communications equipment or other small electronics as researchers have now come closer to making a fiber-like energy storage device that could be woven into clothing.

    Soon, shirts to power wearable devices?

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!
    Do nightmares often wake you up in the middle of the night or make you sweat even during the winter?

    Now, direct your dreams with electric current!

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects
    With its palm open, this robot is completely motionless. A split second later, it suddenly unwinds and catches all sorts of flying objects thrown in its direction - a tennis racket, a ball, a bottle and so on.

    Robotic arm that can catch flying objects