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Cadbury avoids paying UK corporation tax despite £48million profit and legally avoided ‘£10m bill’

The chocolate giant avoided paying £10million bill last year

CHOC giant CADBURY paid zero corporation tax in the UK last year – despite a £48million profit.

The iconic brand, now owned by US firm MONDELEZ, legally avoided a potential £10million bill last year.

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The chocolate giant has avoided paying a potential £10million tax bill last year

Mondelez, formerly KRAFT, controversially took over Cadbury in 2010.

It has moved production of some key products, including one Dairy Milk bar, abroad and cut hundreds of UK jobs.

Accounts out this week show turnover at Cadbury UK, in Bournville, Birmingham, was £122.6million.

The KRAFT take over in 2010 saw production shipped abroadCredit: Getty Images

Its net assets over the year grew to £330.4million, up from £282.6million.

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But a series of accounting moves, all legitimate, means its UK tax due this year was minus £48,000. It called it an adjustment after previous overpayments.

Cadbury, maker of Flake, Crunchie, Wispa and Boost bars, used it to drop its foreign tax bill from £2.902million to £2.854million.

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The TaxPayers’ Alliance said: “It highlights our complex, confusing tax code.”

Mondelez insisted: “We comply with all applicable tax legislation in the UK.”

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