Why would you go to the significant trouble of opening a subsidiary
abroad, with another set of laws and possibly a language to learn, a
new set of politicians and officials to bribe, and all the other
difficulties, unless you expected at least as high a rate of return on
your investment as you could get in your own country?
Do these moronic politicians really believe that 'foreign investment'
happens for the benefit of the natives (and their parasites)?
Any country selling anything to another will make all the profit on its
own end of the deal. UK subsidiaries of Japanese manufacturing
companies, for example, will make little or no profit after paying
Japan high prices for the goods they resell, and its own cost of sales.
In return, the Japanese parent company will cover any small trading
losses which may occur. In what way is this different from a service
company paying a high 'franchise' fee to its parent?
Is Hodge suggesting that BMW in Germany doesn't make a socking great
profit from selling cars into the UK? Why would it pay any more than
salaries and employment taxes to its UK staff, plus the enormous rents
and taxes on showrooms, and the energy taxes? Why would it also declare
profits here so they could be additionally taxed?
And we already have a turnover tax on almost all goods and services,
and like all business taxes it is paid to the government (and some to
the EU) out of the pockets of customers. Even higher VAT, anyone?
--
Joe