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Olympic scale tax avoidance

Jasmine Owens explains how brands sponsoring the Olympic Games in Paris 2024 are coming in last place for tax conduct.

Only 15 brands have bagged the title “Worldwide Olympics Sponsors” – the highest level of Olympic sponsorship. This select few have exposure and advertising rights that few companies could dream of, and collectively provide around 30% of the games’ revenue.

While the Olympics are obviously about sports, they also carry some sort of notion of international cooperation, with organisers seeing the games as a way to create a “peaceful and better world”.

But it seems like fair tax isn’t a necessary part of their vision for getting there. 

All 15 worldwide sponsors received 0/100 for tax conduct in our recent analysis.

Fair tax could help build a “peaceful and better world”

As people worldwide struggle financially with increased food prices and the cost of living in general, corporate taxes could provide governments with income needed to provide infrastructure and support to those who need it.

Yet according to the Tax Justice Network, the world loses the equivalent of a nurse’s annual salary to a tax haven every second, and will lose nearly $5 trillion in the next 10 years.

One destination for this lost public money is executive directors’ bank accounts. Many directors of the worldwide partners are paid eye-watering sums of money. Airbnb’s SEO, for example, received $120m in total compensation in 2020. 

Nil points for brand sponsors’ tax conduct

In April 2024, we rated all the Olympics worldwide sponsors against our tax conduct standard, which weighs up the likelihood that a company is engaging in tax avoidance, and every brand received zero marks out of a possible 100.

The 15 worldwide Olympics sponsors are:

Use of tax havens

When a company doesn’t have workers, shop fronts or factories in, for example, the Cayman Islands, but does own a company there, it’s fair to guess that it may have been set up to make the most of the jurisdiction’s low tax rates.

Owning a subsidiary in a tax haven can help a company’s overall tax payments drop, by artificially moving some of its profits to this other location, and away from the jurisdictions is actually does things in.

We list around 70 tax havens, these being chosen largely based on the Tax Justice Network’s Financial Secrecy Index and the Fair Tax Foundation’s list of tax havens

High risk company types

When the subsidiaries in tax havens are, for example, finance or holding companies, the likelihood they’re being used for tax avoidance is higher still.

All the main Olympics sponsors have at least two high risk subsidiaries in tax havens, and often far more. For this reason they received the lowest marks possible for their tax conduct.

For example, Alibaba and Allianz have finance companies in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and Singapore and haven’t published any explanation why.

Partial image of sprinter in crouched position on running track

Main Olympic sponsors’ tax haven activities

This table lists all the tax havens the Olympics worldwide partners have subsidiaries in, based on data from the D&B Hoovers corporate database (April 2024).

Olympic games worldwide sponsor partners and tax havens
Brand Tax havens they operate in Extra criticisms
AB InBev  Angola, Antigua, Bolivia, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Guernsey, Hong Kong, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mauritius, Namibia, Netherlands, Panama, Singapore, Switzerland, Venezuela.  AB InBev was one of 39 firms targeted by an EU tax investigation in 2019.
Airbnb Ireland, Netherlands, Thailand. Airbnb was ordered in 2023 to pay €576m in a tax dispute in Italy, adding to a previous investigation in 2020 by HMRC which saw it pay out £1.8m.
 Alibaba British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Russia, Switzerland, Thailand, Vietnam. None found
Allianz Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cameroon, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Mauritius, Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Thailand, Vietnam. None found.
Atos Algeria, Belarus, Cameroon, Estonia, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Jersey, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Mauritius, Namibia, Netherlands, Qatar, Singapore, Switzerland, Thailand, UAE, Venezuela. None found.
Bridgestone Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Hungary, Netherlands, Singapore, Thailand, UAE. None found.
Coca-Cola

Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, Thailand, Trinidad and Tobago.

In 2020 Coca-Cola was ruled by a US court to have improperly shifted profits abroad.
Deloitte Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mauritius, Netherlands, Panama, Qatar, Trinidad and Tobago, UAE. Deloitte has high risk subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands, Luxembourg and the Netherlands. It was one of four accounting firms named in a 2022 OECD study as regarded by tax officials to be trying to “exploit loopholes in laws to help clients”.
Intel Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Curacao, Hong Kong, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, Thailand, Vietnam. Intel was listed in a 2023 analysis by The Portland Business Journal which stated that the previous year the company had paid no taxes in Oregon, where it’s a major employer.
Omega Hong Kong, Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Oman, Panama, Qatar, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, Thailand, UAE.   None found.
Panasonic Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Netherlands, Panama, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, Thailand, UAE, Venezuela, Vietnam. In 2022, the Economic Times India website said that India's tax department had accused the company of trying to merge a loss-making and profit-making subsidiary together in order to avoid tax payments.
P&G Procter & Gamble Algeria, Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Oman, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, Thailand, UAE, Venezuela. None found.
Samsung Bangladesh, Costa Rica, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Mauritius, Netherlands, Panama, Russia, Singapore, Switzerland, UAE, Vietnam. Samsung India was issued a government notice around a tax dispute in 2023, after a media report accused it of avoiding $212m worth of import duties. Samsung said the dispute involved “interpretation of the law”.
Toyota Hungary, Ireland, Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Thailand, Venezuela, Vietnam. Toyota, after years of appeals, was in 2022 ordered by the Thai Supreme Court of Justice to pay a settlement over insufficient historic tax payments.
Visa Cyprus, Hong Kong, Hungary, Ireland, Netherlands, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Thailand. None found.

The Olympic Games in Paris will take place from 26 July to 11 August 2024.

Ethical Consumer calls on all multinational companies to meet high standards of transparency across their tax affairs. Its tax rating awards marks for behaviours which include:

  • publishing a policy stating how it is their aim to fairly contribute tax revenue in all the countries in which they operate
  • publishing full country-by-country breakdowns of total revenue, profits and tax paid in line with GRI 207
  • explain publicly the purpose of subsidiaries in tax havens and why they are not being used for tax minimisation purposes.

For those of us who like to watch the games, it would be a more comfortable watch if we knew that they were not funded, at least to some extent, through tax avoidance.

Want to avoid tax avoidance?

Several of the 15 worldwide Olympic sponsor partners are featured in our ethical shopping guides. When next purchasing these products, you could use our guides to find brands that scored well in our tax rating.

Here are some of the guides that feature brands owned by Olympics sponsors: