Search giant Google pulled in a record $8.4 billion in revenue from Australia last year but channelled most of the money offshore via reseller agreements while the social network Twitter, which has dominated headlines, made $19 million.
The results show how Google, away from the spotlight and with a much more orthodox management strategy than that of Twitter’s billionaire boss, Elon Musk, quietly continues to make enormous amounts of money.
Google Australia’s earnings also put it ahead of the highest estimates of Facebook and Instagram-owner Meta’s Australian advertising revenue for the last financial year. But Google’s more recent global quarterly earnings reported in the US last week showed another drop in advertising revenue, just the third for its parent company, Alphabet, since it went public in 2004.
Accounts lodged with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, which give a snapshot of a company’s performance but not the full picture, show Google Australia recorded $1.9 billion in net revenue, paid $92 million in income tax and made an after-tax profit of $274 million for 2022.
The tech giant shifts most of its earnings to an international subsidiary, which ultimately reduces the amount of tax it has to pay in Australia. Gross revenue climbed 12.5 per cent in the calendar year to $8.4 billion and advertising revenue grew from $6.1 billion to $7.1 billion, up 16.4 per cent.
Twitter made $19 million in gross revenue from Australia for the same period, despite an increase of almost 30 per cent year-on-year. Twitter swung from a $2 million loss to a $535,169 profit in 2022, according to its financial documents, which are from the year that the tech company shut most of its local operations. Its tax bill was $804,217.
Twitter has hogged headlines as Musk made drastic cuts in an attempt to turn its finances around, quarrelled with celebrities, alienated advertisers, banned some journalists from the platform and made haphazard progress on a new blue tick verification system.
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Companies pay taxes on profits, not revenue. However, tech companies have been criticised for funnelling money generated in Australia through offshore subsidiaries in lower tax jurisdictions to reduce their local profits and minimise their tax bills. Despite most of its money moving offshore, Google is publicly supportive of efforts to reform the global tax system and is a voluntary signatory of Australia’s Tax Transparency Code.