What is the justification for these tax breaks? Kind of reminds me (a bit) of 
the $3billion plus
that the current government in Ottawa has 'misplaced' at the same time they cut 
valuable
social and environmental programs.     Sally
________________________________
From: Portside moderator [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, May 05, 2013 7:07 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Dodging Corporate Taxes - Big Time

[http://portside.org/sites/default/files/logo_red.png]<http://portside.org>


Dodging Corporate Taxes - Big Time 
<http://portside.org/2013-05-05/dodging-corporate-taxes-big-time>



May 5, 2013
<http://portside.org/>

That $9.2 billion tax bill that Apple dodged in cooking up a scheme this week 
to finance a $55 billion stock buyback for its shareholders would have been 
enough to make unnecessary all of the major budget cuts in the sequester. 
That's not counting the tax dodges of Bank of America, Citigroup, ExxonMobil, 
FedEx, General Electric, Honeywell, Merck, Microsoft, Pfizer, and Verizon.


[http://portside.org/sites/default/files/field/image/Corporate%20tax%20dodgers%20-%20graph%201.jpg]
Decline of Corporate Taxes as Percent of Federal Revenues 1952-2012, 
IPS<http://www.ips-dc.org/files/5975/Corporate%20tax%20dodgers%20-%20graph%201.jpg?width=500>,


The Bite of Apple: Firm Dodges Enough Taxes To Cover Much of Sequester
Corporate Tax Dodgers: 10 Companies and Their Tax Loopholes

The Bite of Apple: Firm Dodges Enough Taxes To Cover Much of Sequester
Isaiah J. Poole
Campaign for America's Future
May 5, 2013
http://blog.ourfuture.org/20130503/the-bite-of-apple-firm-dodges-enough-taxes-to-cover-much-of-sequester



The scheme that Apple cooked up this week to finance a $55 billion stock 
buyback for its shareholders was orchestrated to avoid paying $9.2 billion in 
taxes, Bloomberg reported 
Friday<http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-05-02/apple-avoids-9-2-billion-in-taxes-with-debt-deal.html>.

That $9.2 billion tax bill that Apple dodged would have been enough to make 
unnecessary all of the major budget cuts we’ve been writing about this week as 
part of our “Repeal the Sequester” 
campaign<http://blog.ourfuture.org/20130503/blog.ourfuture.org/c/repeal-sequester>.
 With $9.2 billion, the federal government could have (based on lists compiled 
by The Washington Post’s 
Wonkblog<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/02/20/the-sequester-absolutely-everything-you-could-possibly-need-to-know-in-one-faq/>
 and Think 
Progress<http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2013/04/26/1927581/12-programs-congress-refuses-to-save-from-automatic-spending-cuts/>):

  *   Paid for rescinding the furloughs of air traffic controllers without 
raiding $250 million from an airport improvement fund.
  *   Restored Head Start funding to avoid having to kick an estimated 70,000 
people out of the program this year.
  *   Kept Meals on Wheels funding for seniors intact.
  *   Restored National Institutes of Health funding, so that research on 
cancer treatments and other diseases could continue uninterrupted.
  *   Rescinded cuts of up to 10.7 percent in unemployment checks to people who 
have been looking for work for more than six months without success.
  *   Kept paying for public housing assistance and housing vouchers for people 
who might otherwise be homeless or in substandard living conditions.
  *   Rescinded cuts in programs for children with special needs and learning 
disabilities.
  *   Kept already stretched Occupational Safety and Health inspectors on the 
job, doing the 1,200 workplace inspections that are being shelved by 
sequestration.
  *   Fully funded disaster relief programs, a particularly critical need now 
that a wildfire is currently causing serious damage in southern California.
  *   Restored $480 million now cut from the FBI’s operations.
  *   Kept intact the federal programs responsible for safeguarding our nuclear 
weapons.
  *   Avoided cutting $770 million in various State Department health and 
economic aid programs, plus another $650 million in funding for diplomatic 
activities.
  *   Fully funded NASA operations, which would have been a boon to central 
Florida and to Texas communities already hurting because of the end of the 
space shuttle program.

Apple was able to do this because of techniques it 
uses<http://www.policymic.com/articles/7868/apple-icheat-how-the-world-s-biggest-company-also-became-the-most-unethical>
 to keep its U.S.-made profits offshore, and because of provision in the tax 
code that allows it to deduct interest it pays on money it borrows. That’s a 
double whammy: It does not pay the taxes it should on the money it earns from 
all of those i-whatevers we buy (including the Macbook Pro I am using to type 
this post) and it gets money from the government when it borrows money from a 
big bank rather than using the money from its overseas stockpile.

Apple makes great products, but the obscenity of its use of the tax code to 
avoid paying its fair share for the functions of government that make its 
success possible is only exceeded by the tax code itself and the nexus of 
ideology and corporate greed that created it. This latest news from Apple 
underscores the need to end corporate tax 
evasion<http://blog.ourfuture.org/20130423/reform-leaders-explain-moves-to-end-corporate-tax-evasion>
 – not with lobbyist-written schemes like the “territorial tax” that would 
essentially engrave offshore tax dodging into the tax code but with fair, more 
progressive tax structures that require corporations to pay taxes on their 
earnings just as working people must by April 15 every year.


Corporate Tax Dodgers: 10 Companies and Their Tax Loopholes

Sarah Anderson, Scott Klinger, Javier Rojo
IPS
April 15, 2013
http://www.ips-dc.org/reports/corporate_tax_dodgers

A new report looks at 10 U.S. corporations that have used an array of tax 
loopholes and corporate subsidies to slash their tax bills: Bank of America, 
Citigroup, ExxonMobil, FedEx, General Electric, Honeywell, Merck, Microsoft, 
Pfizer, and Verizon.

HIGHLIGHTS OF 10 CORPORATE TAX DODGERS

Bank of America
Had $17.2 billion in profits offshore in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes. 
Reported it would owe $4.3 billion in U.S. taxes if profits are brought home.

Citigroup
Had $42.6 billion in profits offshore in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes. 
Reported it would owe $11.5 billion in U.S. taxes if profits are brought home.

ExxonMobil
Paid just a 15% federal income tax rate from 2010-2012, less than half the 
official 35% corporate tax rate – a tax subsidy of $6.2 billion. Had $43 
billion in profits offshore in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes.

FedEx
Made $5.7 billion from 2010-2012 and didn’t pay a dime in federal income taxes. 
Got a tax subsidy of $2.1 billion. Received $10.3 billion in federal contracts 
from 2006-2012.

General Electric
Made $88 billion from 2002-2012 and paid just 2.4% in taxes for a tax subsidy 
of $29 billion. Paid no taxes in 4 years. Had $108 billion in profits offshore 
in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes. Received $21.8 billion in federal 
contracts from 2006-2012.

Honeywell
Made $5 billion from 2009-2012 and paid just $50 million in federal income 
taxes – a tax subsidy of $1.7 billion. Had $11.6 billion in profits offshore in 
2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes. Received $16.7 billion in federal 
contracts from 2006-2012.

Merck
Made $13.6 billion and paid $2.5 billion in federal income taxes from 
2009-2012. Paid an 18.4% federal income tax rate, half the official 35% rate – 
a tax subsidy of $2.2 billion. Had $53.4 billion in profits offshore in 2012 on 
which it paid no U.S. taxes. Received $8.7 billion in federal contracts from 
2006-2012.

Microsoft
Saved $4.5 billion in federal income taxes from 2009-2011 by transferring 
profits to a subsidiary in the tax haven of Puerto Rico. Had $60.8 billion in 
profits stashed offshore in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. taxes; reported it 
would owe $19.4 billion if profits are brought home.

Pfizer
Received $2.2 billion in federal tax refunds from 2010-2012 while earning $43 
billion worldwide even though 40% of its sales are in America. Had $73 billion 
in profits offshore in 2012 on which it paid no U.S. income taxes. Received 
$3.4 billion in federal contracts from 2010-2012.

Verizon
Made $19.3 billion in U.S. pretax profits from 2008-2012 but paid no federal 
income taxes during the period; instead got $535 million in tax rebates. Total 
tax subsidy: $7.3 billion. Received up to $6 billion in federal contracts from 
2011 through 2023.

CORPORATE TAX DODGERS AND THEIR FAVORITE LOOPHOLES

As the budget battles in Washington continue, corporations have stepped into 
the fray with some of
the most aggressive lobbying we’ve seen in years – calling for cuts to 
corporate tax rates, a widening of offshore tax loopholes that already cost the 
U.S. Treasury $90 billion a year, and cuts to government services and benefits, 
including Social Security and Medicare.

In making their case, corporate executives decry the U.S.’s 35% corporate tax 
rate claiming it is the highest in the world and makes their businesses 
uncompetitive globally. The evidence suggests otherwise.

Corporate profits are at a 60-year high, while corporate taxes are near a 
60-year low [See Figure]. U.S. stock markets are at record levels, and American 
CEOs are paid far more than executives who run firms of similar size in other 
nations. Many U.S. corporations pay a higher tax rate to foreign governments 
than they do here at home.

America’s 35% tax rate is the highest among industrialized nations, but very 
few companies pay anything like those rates. Total corporate federal taxes paid 
fell to 12.1% of U.S. profits in 2011, according to the Congressional Budget 
Office. The average profitable company in the Fortune 500 paid just 18.5% of 
its profits in federal income taxes between 2008 and 2010, according to 
Citizens for Tax Justice, a nonpartisan tax research organization. Dozens of 
large and profitable companies paid nothing in recent years.

CEOs who are the face of various corporate pro-austerity, anti-tax campaigns 
with names like Fix the Debt, The LIFT America Coalition, The RATE Coalition 
and even the long-standing Business Roundtable, preach a theory that cutting 
corporate taxes is “pro-growth.” But they neglect to say that the growth is of 
their corporate bottom lines, not the economy and certainly not social 
well-being.

Though many of these austerity crusaders have corporate retirement plans that 
will provide tens- and even hundreds of thousands of dollars PER MONTH in their 
retirement, these CEOs shamelessly argue for cutting monthly Social Security 
benefits and raising the retirement age to 70 – which automatically reduces 
seniors’ retirement benefits by 20%.

It wasn’t always this way. There was a time, not so long ago, when America’s 
largest businesses did not question the need for taxes to pay for investments 
in education, infrastructure and basic research that benefited businesses and 
citizens alike. It was from these investments that things like computers, the 
Internet and life-saving drugs and medical technology emerged in life-changing 
ways.

In 1952, under Republican President Dwight D Eisenhower, corporate income taxes 
were nearly a third of the federal government’s receipts but had declined to 
less than 10% by 2012. This is due to a corporate tax code riddled with 
loopholes, perks and preferences won by corporate lobbyists and backed by 
millions of dollars of campaign gifts to Members of Congress.

This report looks at 10 U.S. corporations that have used an array of tax 
loopholes and corporate subsidies to slash their tax bills. Here are a few of 
the loopholes and subsidies:

The offshore tax loophole. This gaping loophole costs the U.S. Treasury $90 
billion a year by letting corporations ship profits and jobs overseas. It was 
originally established to encourage U.S. multinational corporations to expand 
their businesses into other countries; for instance, to encourage car 
manufacturers to build plants and sell cars in Germany or England. If profits 
from those sales were reinvested in new and better plants overseas, that money 
would not be subject to U.S. income taxes. But starting a couple of decades 
ago, corporate tax attorneys and accountants found ways to stretch this concept 
and set up ways for companies to register intellectual property, such as 
patents or trademarks, in low-tax nations, called tax havens.

When a product is sold in America, a chunk of the purchase price is sent to the 
tax haven to pay for use of the patent, and these funds escape U.S. taxes. One 
of the companies profiled in this report is Microsoft, which sends 47 cents of 
every U.S. sales dollar to Puerto Rico to pay for patents on discoveries 
largely made in the United States. Pfizer has turned these tax-avoiding paper 
transactions into an art form – it sells 40% of its drugs here but hasn’t 
reported any U.S. profits in five years. Merck and Citigroup also benefit from 
offshore tax loopholes.

The excessive CEO pay tax dodge. This loophole was created in 1993 when 
Congress passed legislation seeking to cap the deductibility of executive 
compensation to no more than $1 million per year per executive. Companies could 
continue to pay whatever they wanted, taxpayers just wouldn’t be subsidizing 
more than the first $1 million per executive. As the bill moved through 
Congress, a loophole was inserted that exempted all pay considered to be 
“performance based.” Rather than reining in pay, the effect of the law with the 
loophole intact was an explosion of stock-based compensation. This loophole 
costs the U.S. Treasury $8 billion a year. Honeywell is one of the company’s 
profiled that has used this loophole to save on its taxes.

The corporate malfeasance tax dodge. When you get a parking ticket or a 
speeding ticket, come tax day you are out of luck because such fines are not 
tax deductible. But if you are a corporation, the costs of corporate crimes and 
abuse are most often tax deductible, in effect forcing other taxpayers to 
subsidize their abusive behavior. When Bank of America paid to settle claims 
that its foreclosure practices violated the rights of customers who lost their 
homes or when ExxonMobil paid $1.1 billion to settle claims for the Exxon 
Valdez oil spill, their tax deductions of these costs meant the rest of us 
picked up some of the tab for their harmful practices.

The paying business to do what it would do anyway tax subsidy. Several 
companies profiled were able to sharply cut their taxes by taking advantage of 
special tax write-offs associated with the 2009 stimulus bill. Corporations 
have long been allowed to deduct a portion of the cost of their property and 
equipment over the life of the asset. But the 2009 law allowed companies to 
immediately write-off 50% of the value of the equipment in the year the 
purchase was made, regardless of how long the equipment was expected to last. 
While the intent of the legislation was to get businesses to spend more to 
stimulate the economy, in reality most companies got enormous tax breaks for 
doing what they were going to do anyway. FedEx and Verizon are big 
beneficiaries of this subsidy as they buy aircraft and build cell phone towers.

Bank Bailout, round 2. America’s taxpayers spent more than $2 trillion to 
bailout America’s financial institutions during the recent banking crisis. But 
the terms of the bailout did not address whether the financial institutions 
involved could use the losses incurred during the crisis to reduce their taxes 
for years to come, in effect, giving them a second bailout. Bank of America 
used its losses as a get-out-of-taxes free card. Many other banks and financial 
institutions did the same.

IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THIS WAY

There are two bills in Congress that would close some of these loopholes and 
ensure that some companies pay their fair share of taxes.

The Cut Unjustified Tax Loopholes Act (S. 268, introduced by Sen. Carl Levin 
(D-MI)) would close offshore loopholes by establishing command and control 
provisions that would treat foreign subsidiaries controlled from America as U.S 
businesses for tax purposes. It would also end some of the deductions 
corporations presently enjoy from stock-option based pay of corporate 
executives, and close some of the oil and gas subsidies in the tax code.

The Corporate Tax Dodging Prevention Act (S. 250, introduced by Sen Bernie 
Sanders (I-VT) and H.R. 694, introduced by Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-IL)) would 
end the current practice of deferral that allows companies to avoid taxes on 
offshore profits, both those earned offshore and those shifted there through 
accounting gimmicks. This bill would tax the global profits of U.S. 
corporations and provide for a 100% foreign tax credit for any taxes paid to 
foreign governments. It would raise $590 billion over ten years according to 
the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation.

There is widespread and growing public opinion among the American public and 
the small business community that corporate tax loopholes need to be closed so 
we have the money to invest in a more promising future. This support is seen 
across the political spectrum. Corporate tax dodging is not a Republican issue 
or a Democratic issue, it is an American issue. The American people are saying 
it is long past time that corporations step up and pay their fair share to fix 
the debt and assure that our country has sufficient public investment to create 
opportunities for all to succeed in their life, their liberty and the pursuit 
of happiness for them and their families.

Authors: Scott Klinger, Sarah Anderson, Javier Rojo, Institute for Policy 
Studies
Editorial Support: Frank Clemente, Americans for Tax Fairness
Designer: Tyler Driscoll

Methodology
For a description of the methodologies used to determine corporate taxes paid, 
corporate tax subsidies and CEO compensation go here: 
http://www.americansfortaxfairness.org/baseball-methodolgy/

The Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) is a community of public scholars and 
organizers linking peace, justice, and the environment in the United States and 
globally. We work with social movements to promote true democracy and challenge 
concentrated wealth, corporate influence, and military power. Visit online at: 
www.ips-dc.org/<http://www.ips-dc.org/>

Americans for Tax Fairness (ATF) is a diverse campaign of 280 national, state, 
and local organizations united in support of a tax system that works for all 
Americans. It has come together based on the belief that the country needs 
comprehensive, progressive tax reform that results in greater revenue to meet 
our growing needs. Visit online at: 
www.americansfortaxfairness.org/<http://www.americansfortaxfairness.org/>






VIEW ONLINE<http://portside.org/2013-05-05/dodging-corporate-taxes-big-time>
PRINT<http://portside.org/print/node/2534>
SUBSCRIBE<http://portside.org/subscribe>
VISIT PORTSIDE.ORG<http://portside.org>
TWITTER<https://twitter.com/portsideorg>
FACEBOOK<https://facebook.com/Portside.PortsideLabor>






Portside aims to provide material of interest to people on the left that will 
help them to interpret the world and to change it.


Submit via web<http://portside.org/submit>
Submit via email<mailto:[email protected]>
Frequently asked questions<http://portside.org/faq>
Manage subscription<http://portside.org/subscribe>
Search Portside archives<http://portside.org/archive>



To unsubscribe, click 
here<http://lists.portside.org/cgi-bin/listserv/wa?TICKET=NzM1MDIzIGxlcm5lckBVV0FURVJMT08uQ0EgUE9SVFNJREUgIBmBaQbVR3NZ&c=SIGNOFF>.
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to