FAT CAT GOOGLE BOSS Tell’s Investigators He Has So Much Money He Can’t Even Count It

FAT CAT GOOGLE BOSS Tell’s Investigators He Has So Much Money He Can’t Even Count It

Watch moment Google boss claims he has no idea how much he gets paid

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/google-boss-blasted-living-another-7349815

The head of Google Europe Matt Brittin is accused of “living in a different world” after telling MPs he has no idea what he’s paid

 
 
 

Google’s fatcat boss was told he “lives in a different world” today after admitting he has no idea how much he gets paid.

Multi-millionaire Matt Brittin, president of Google Europe, Middle East and Africa, was unable to tell MPs the size of his own salary.

“It’s a salary, errr, I don’t have the figure,” the stammering Google chief said.

“I’ll provide the figure privately if it is relevant for the committee to understand my salary.”

Read more: Google tax hearing live: Updates as MPs grill tech firm’s bosses over £130m ‘sweetheart’ deal

Brittin is appearing before the Public Accounts Committee where he is being grilled about the ‘sweetheart’ deal that will see the tech giant pay just £130million in back taxes despite making sales of more than £4.6bn in the UK.

Asked by committee chair Meg Hillier MP what he was paid, Brittin replied: “I understand the anger, I’ll happily disclose that if it’s a relative matter for the committee”.

 

Matt Brittin, President, Google Europe
Search the money: Google boss Matt Brittin struggles to defend the tax deal

MPs erupted in scornful laughter to his comments.

Ms Hillier said he was living on a “different planet.”

 

“You don’t know what you get paid, Mr Brittin?

“Taxpayers out there are very angry. They live in a different world to what you live in, clearly.

“Perhaps you’ve got tin ears!” she said.

She added: “Don’t you feel a bit embarrassed by this?

“You don’t know how much you are paid. You are living on a different planet to most of our constituents.

 

Meg Hillier
Disbelief: Meg Hillier

“Out there, taxpayers, our constituents, are very angry, they live in a different world clearly to the world you live in, if you can’t even tell us what you are paid.

 

“It seems a bit of a PR disaster if you didn’t have the nous to realise in the same week that taxpayers were filing their tax returns, and sweating over a little bit of bank interest and getting it in on time, and you announce this as a good deal.”

Mr Brittin responded: “I understand the anger and understand that people when they see reported that we are paying 3% tax would be angry. But we’re not. We’re paying 20% tax.”

The £130 million figure was “the conclusion of a six-year rigorous, independent tax audit in which we are paying tax at 20% like every other UK company”, he said.