EU competition commissioner Margrethe Vestager told the BBC today it was too soon to say whether a probe would be launched. She said the EU "will take a look" if appropriate concerns are brought to her attention.
"If we find there is something to be concerned about, if someone writes to us and says this is maybe not as it should be, then we will take a look," Vestager said.
"Considering the lack of transparency in the settlement reached between HMRC (the U.K. Tax and customs authority) and Google, and the growing concerns of an opaque methodology having been employed, it is my view that an independent verification of this settlement would establish confidence that the settlement is within the boundaries of state aid regulations and is a fair deal for the taxpayers of the United Kingdom," he wrote.
Vestager's spokesman, Ricardo Cardoso, said later that "we will look into it and then decide where to move from there."
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"Governments make tax law, the tax authorities independently enforce the law, and Google complies with the law," he wrote.
The anger of lawmakers has been stoked by reports that France and Italy were in talks to squeeze more out of the company.
In Italy, the financial police confirmed news reports today that Google was under investigation for allegedly avoiding up to around 300 million euros (USD 326 million) in taxes. Italian daily La Repubblica reported that the investigation stems from Google activities in Italy from 2008-2013, when Google allegedly declared its fiscal headquarters in Ireland.