Chinese State Media Accuses GSK Of Dodging Millions In Taxes

International Business Times

Published May 19, 2014 06:51AM ET

Chinese State Media Accuses GSK Of Dodging Millions In Taxes

By Reuters - A Chinese state-run newspaper has accused British drugmaker Glaxosmithkline (LONDON:GSK) of evading at least 100 million yuan ($16.04 million) in taxes, adding to pressure on the firm which is already struggling with graft charges against executives.

Chinese police on Wednesday said they had charged the former boss of GSK's China business and other colleagues, in the biggest corruption scandal to hit a foreign company there since four Rio Tinto executives were jailed in 2009.

Although the corruption charges target executives rather than the company itself, the mounting allegations made by Chinese media suggest the drugmaker is far from safe.

The Legal Daily newspaper, run by the ruling Chinese Communist Party's Political and Legal Committee, reported on Friday that GSK intentionally imported Lamivudine, used to treat HIV as well as hepatitis, at an elevated cost.

Along with using tax loopholes for charitable donations, this helped GSK "avoid over 100 million yuan in import value-added tax and corporate income tax," the report said.

The report followed less-detailed allegations by state news agency Xinhua saying GSK used transfer pricing to artificially reduce its profits and tax bill in China.

GSK officials in Shanghai and London declined to comment, despite repeated phone, text and email requests from Reuters since Friday. The drugmaker said on Wednesday that the graft charges were "shameful" and that it hoped to reach a resolution to enable it to continue serving Chinese consumers.