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F1 pays almost no tax - report

The sport paid less than $1.5 million in tax in 2011

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A clever tax arrangement sees formula one pay a tiny amount of tax, it has emerged.

Writing in The Independent, leading F1 business journalist Christian Sylt said the sport paid less than $1.5 million in tax in 2011, despite making a profit of almost half a billion dollars.

Sylt said the low tax bill was achieved due to a complex web of loans within the Bernie Ecclestone-headed empire.

Sun journalist Ben Hunt quoted British tax office Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs as saying: "We do not discuss individual businesses."

The formula one teams association FOTA also declined to comment.

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