Apple Korea offices raided by antitrust officials [u]

Posted:
in General Discussion edited September 2022
Officials from Korea's Fair Trade Commission conducted a dawn raid on Apple's offices in Gangnam-gu, Seoul, over allegations that its App Store has been collecting 33% in-app payment fees, rather than its stated 30%.




Apple has previously settled a South Korea antitrust case, which had been about the company allegedly abusing its size to drive out local competition. Now, however, the Korean FTC is responding to allegations about fees from the Korea Mobile Games Association (KMGA).

According to ChosunBiz, a local publication, the KMGA claimed to the FTC that there is an issue regard tax and tax collection. A consumer who buys an app is paying 10% value added tax (VAT) under South Korean laws, and app developers should be paying Apple 30% of the fee excluding that tax.

However, KMGA claims that Apple is instead charging its 30% fee on the total consumer spend, including VAT. This equates to Apple effectively charging developers 33%.

ChosunBiz says that ordinarily, a complaint such as this would be investigated by local FTC officials. But this has case is considered higher priority, and the raid was conducted under the aegis of the national FTC.

KMGA estimates that Apple owes developers damages amounting to 345 billion won ($241 million) for App Store fees between 2015 and 2022. It is not clear why the group's estimate concludes at 2020.

An Apple spokesperson told AppleInsider that, "Apple is fully cooperating with the KFTC during their investigation."

"We look forward to explaining how the App Store has been a tremendous business opportunity for Korean developers," the spokesperson continued.

Separately, Apple and Google are being subjected to an FTC investigation over "harmful practices" in how they allegedly gather and profit from personal information.

Updated: 08:35 Eastern with Apple's comment

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 8
    eBay does the exact same thing in the US. 
    FileMakerFellerwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 8
    badmonkbadmonk Posts: 1,295member
    A morning raid seems a bit heavy-handed and disruptive, wouldn’t a team of government tax attorneys have taken care of it?  Then again the government does this to Samsung on occasion.
    watto_cobrakillroy
  • Reply 3 of 8
    davidwdavidw Posts: 2,053member
    Isn't Apple the one that has to (or suppose to) collect the VAT on their commission?

    So a $1 App would cost the buyer $1.10, including the 10% VAT. So the total is split, Apple gets $.33 and the developer gets $.77. Apple gives the government $.03 for the 10% VAT on their commission and the developer gives $.07 for the 10% VAT. The government gets $.10 in VAT on the sale of $1. Apple ends up with $.30 and the developer ends up with $.70. 

    VAT is like a sales tax on the buyers end but on the sellers end, there are other things going on. Basically, companies pays various VAT's before the sale and gets credit back when they collect it from the consumers. Too complicated for me to fully understand how it works.     
    edited September 2022 FileMakerFellerwatto_cobrakillroy
  • Reply 4 of 8
    If developers are expected to pay their 70% on the 10% VAT, and they haven't been, could this be a matter of interpretation? Could the FTC be expecting Apple to have paid the full VAT on the developers' behalf?

    Tax laws are messy and create undue stress on too many people and companies.
    edited September 2022 FileMakerFellerwatto_cobrakillroy
  • Reply 5 of 8
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member
    Samsung’s govt is in full force. 
    watto_cobrakillroy
  • Reply 6 of 8
    badmonk said:
    A morning raid seems a bit heavy-handed and disruptive, wouldn’t a team of government tax attorneys have taken care of it?  Then again the government does this to Samsung on occasion.
    Gangnam(-gu) style! :wink:
    watto_cobrakillroy
  • Reply 7 of 8

    KMGA estimates that Apple owes developers damages amounting to 345 billion won ($241 million) for App Store fees between 2015 and 2022. It is not clear why the group's estimate concludes at 2020.
    is that a typo? 
    Perhaps KMGA believe that Apple changed its tax collection processes in 2020 but still have not paid money to developers that it collected using the previous scheme.
    watto_cobra
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