On Tuesday, the European Union’s highest court issued two significant rulings in favor of the bloc’s efforts to regulate technology behemoths. These rulings came as a result of separate legal disputes with Apple and Google, each involving billions of euros.
The rulings provide a boost to the European Union’s outgoing competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, who had experienced a series of setbacks in EU courts challenging her decisions.
In a significant resolution to a protracted legal dispute, the European Court of Justice has determined that the esteemed iPhone manufacturer is obligated to remit a substantial sum of 13 billion euros (approximately $14.3 billion) in outstanding tax liabilities to the nation of Ireland.
Ireland provided Apple with unlawful aid, which Ireland is obligated to recover, the court stated in a declaration.
Moments later, the court also upheld a 2.4 billion euro fine against Google, one of a series of prominent EU competition cases targeting the technology giant.
The court dismissed an appeal by Google against the 2017 fine, slapped on the search engine for abusing its dominant position by favouring its own comparison shopping service.
Apple said later on Tuesday, in a US securities filing, that it would take up to a $10 billion earnings hit.
The figure will not make much of a dent in a company that saw global sales of $383 billion and a net profit of $97 billion in the year to September 2023.
‘Disappointed’
Vestager hailed the rulings as a “big win for European citizens and for tax justice” and warned the EU would “continue to push” and “go after” abuses of dominance.
“I was ready to face the loss. It was the win that made me cry,” an emotional Vestager told reporters in Brussels.
Apple and Google said they were “disappointed” by the decisions.
Ireland, which is home to Apple’s EU headquarters and had challenged Brussels’ position, said it would “respect” the court’s findings.
One of the most bitter legal battles between the European Commission and big tech, the Apple case dates back to 2016 when the EU’s executive arm claimed Ireland allowed the iPhone maker to avoid billions of euros in taxes.
By the commission’s calculations, Dublin allowed Apple to pay a tax rate of one percent of its European profits in 2003 which then dropped to 0.005 percent by 2014.
Sweetheart tax arrangements
It was one of several investigations over the previous decade into sweetheart tax arrangements between major companies and several EU countries.
But Apple on Tuesday said there was no “special deal”.
“We always pay all the taxes we owe wherever we operate,” the company said in a statement.
The ruling is a blow for Apple as the iPhone maker had gained the upper hand in the Ireland case in 2020, when the EU’s General Court annulled the order for it to pay the taxes owed.
Following an appeal by Brussels, the legal adviser of the higher European Court of Justice in November recommended scrapping the 2020 decision, saying it was peppered with legal errors.
The top court, which could have sent the case back to the lower court, decided to rule that Apple should pay the back-taxes.
The conclusion to the case spelled relief for Brussels, which has faced difficulties defending its tax enforcement moves in recent years, with previous cases lost against Amazon and Starbucks.
Vestager admitted she was “positively surprised” by the decision but warned “there is still an occurrence of massive profit shifting into low tax territories”.
She will be replaced later this year when the new European Commission takes office, and advised her successor to “make this one of many necessary priorities”.
Google’s vice tightening
The EU fine against Google was one of several record penalties imposed for violating EU competition rules, totalling around eight billion euros between 2017 and 2019.
“We are disappointed,” Google said. “We made changes back in 2017 to comply with the European Commission’s decision.”
Google faces yet another test next week when the top EU court will decide on the smallest of those fines, worth around 1.49 billion euros.
Legal headaches for Google are also mounting across the Atlantic.
A trial began on Monday in the United States where the government accuses Google of dominating online advertising and stifling competition.
It comes after a US judge ruled last month that Google maintained a monopoly with its search engine.
Google’s so-called ad tech — the system that decides which online adverts people see and how much they cost — is an area of particular concern for regulators worldwide.
Brussels last year accused Google of abusing its dominance of the online ad market and recommended the US company sell part of its ad services to ensure fair competition.