The company said that it will pay $38 billion
in taxes on cash it has been keeping overseas. It also pledged to create 20,000
jobs and invest $30 billion in U.S. facilities over the next five years.
The $38 billion tax payment from bringing home overseas
profits "would likely be the largest of its kind ever made," Apple
said in a press release.
New U.S. tax rules mean companies like Apple
can no longer avoid paying taxes on past international profits by holding the
cash outside the United States. They must pay tax whether they bring the money
back to the country or not.
American
companies with global operations are now expected to pay hundreds of billions
of dollars on the overseas profits they've amassed in recent decades.
Apple also informed employees worldwide on 18th
of this month, that they would receive a $2,500 stock bonus in response to the
new U.S. tax code, according to a source familiar with the matter. Bloomberg,
which reported the news earlier, said the bonus would be available to employees
below a certain senior level.
Apple employs about 123,000 full-time workers
around the world. About 84,000 of those employees are based in the United
States. The $30 billion investment in
the company's facilities across the United States will include a new campus in
a yet-to-be-disclosed location.
The campus will "initially house technical
support for customers," according to the press release. Apple declined to
give further details about the planned campus, saying more information will be
disclosed later this year.
Campuses generally refer to a sprawling
facility where Apple employees -- working on everything from engineering to
customer service -- report for duty. The company currently has two such
locations: one in Silicon Valley and another in Austin, Texas.
At least $10 billion of the new investment will
go toward building new data centres --
massive computer warehouses that store information to support services like
Apple's Siri, iMessage and Apple Music, the company said.
Apple
already has data centres in seven states.
In August, the company announced plans to open a data centre in Des Moines, Iowa, that would cost $1.3 billion and create
550 construction and operations jobs.
Apple claims these new investments combined
with its "current pace of spending with domestic suppliers and
manufacturers" will add about $350 billion to the U.S. economy over the
next five years.
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