This Wall Street Journal article describes how Wal-Mart is able to pay about 
half as
much state tax as a typical corporation.

Drucker, Jesse. 2007. "Inside Wal-Mart's Bid To Slash State Taxes." Wall Street
Journal (23 October): p. A 1.

"In May 2001, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. issued an appeal to big accounting firms: 
Find us
creative new ways to cut our state tax bills.  Ernst & Young LLP swung into 
action.
Senior tax experts at the big accounting firm swapped ideas via email and in a 
series
of meetings. At least one gathering, according to an internal Ernst & Young 
calendar,
took place in Wal-Mart's headquarters in the "Tax Shelter Room"."

"Big companies hardly ever discuss how outside accountants, lawyers and 
investment
bankers help them cut their tax bills.  But Ernst & Young's contributions to
Wal-Mart's state-tax minimization project are outlined in a raft of documents 
filed
in recent months in North Carolina state court, where the state's attorney 
general is
challenging a Wal-Mart tax-cutting structure involving real-estate investment 
trusts.
The material, which includes company emails and memos, provides a rare window 
into
accountants' role in generating tax-reduction ideas at one major company."

"Companies often assert that tax savings are simply happy byproducts of 
transactions
pursued for other business reasons. But documents from the North Carolina case
indicate that Wal-Mart, from the outset, had one primary purpose: cutting its 
state
income taxes. Ernst & Young worked to fulfill that goal.  In 2002, for example, 
the
accounting firm delivered a 37-page proposal laying out a smorgasbord of 27 
potential
tax strategies, most tailored to a particular state's tax code. It described 
one of
them as "a very aggressive strategy with considerable risk."

"Publicly traded companies reduced their federal income taxes by about $12 
billion in
2004 through potentially abusive tax transactions, according to Internal Revenue
Service data.  Some experts say companies save far more than that each year 
through
elaborate tax-cutting maneuvers."

"Wal-Mart's 2001 letter to accounting firms got right to the point.  It began:
"Wal-Mart is requesting your proposal(s) for professional tax advice and related
implementation services in connection with minimization of state income taxes 
in the
following states: Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, and Pennsylvania"."

"State income-tax rates for corporations average about 6.9%, and come on top of 
a
federal statutory rate of 35%.  Tax rates vary from state to state, and some 
states
have no corporate tax at all on certain income.  That provides ample 
opportunity for
so-called tax arbitrage, in which companies allocate expenses and revenues 
between
states in order to minimize taxes owed."

"On average, Wal-Mart has paid taxes at a rate equal to about half of the 
average
statutory state rate over the past decade, according to an analysis of the 
company's
regulatory filings by Standard & Poor's Compustat."

"In the early 1990s, it employed an "intangibles holding company," a unit 
operating
in tax-friendly Delaware into which it transferred ownership of its brand names 
such
as Sam's Club.  It then made payments to that unit for use of those brands, 
deducting
them as expenses from its taxable income in other states, according to court 
records.
That strategy fell out of favor after several states successfully challenged 
Wal-Mart
and other companies in court over the maneuver."

"Wal-Mart set aside about $526 million for state and local income taxes last 
year,
not including its substantial property-tax bills, according to the company's
financial reports.  But its various state tax-cutting strategies seem to have 
had an
impact.  On average, Wal-Mart has paid taxes at a rate equal to about half of 
the
average statutory state rate over the past decade, according to an analysis of 
the
company's regulatory filings by Standard & Poor's Compustat."

"After Wal-Mart hired the firm in 1996 ..., an Ernst & Young tax executive 
urged his
team to be discreet, according to a staff memo included in North Carolina court
records. "We don't think there is much the state taxing authorities can do to
mitigate these savings to Wal-Mart, however some states might attempt something 
if
they had advance notification," he wrote.  "We think the best course of action 
is to
keep the project relatively quiet .... there just seems to be too many 
opportunities
for it to get out to the press or financial community and we all know they are
difficult to control, particularly when we are dealing with a client as 
well-known as
Wal-Mart"."

"David Bullington, Wal-Mart's vice president for tax policy, said in a 
deposition
that he began feeling pressure to lower the company's effective tax rate after 
the
current chief financial officer, Thomas Schoewe, was hired in 2000. Mr. Schoewe 
was
familiar with "some very sophisticated and aggressive tax planning," Mr. 
Bullington
said, according to a transcript of the deposition, taken by the North Carolina
attorney general's office in July.  "And he ride herds [sic] on us all the time 
that
we have the world's highest tax rate of any major company"."

"As Ernst & Young worked on its proposals, one high-ranking tax partner sent an 
email
to a colleague addressing a concern often faced by companies: how to describe a
tax-driven transaction in a way that won't create problems later on with tax
authorities.  "You asked if we have a document that details how the tax savings 
will
work, how much they will save ....  We really don't have anything like that 
except
for the sales document, partly because we have avoided calling this a 'tax' 
project,
to show that we did not have a tax savings motivation, rather it is a 'domestic
restructuring' project," he wrote."

"As for Wal-Mart's "Tax Shelter Room," North Carolina officials asked Mr. 
Bullington
about the odd name. In his deposition, the Wal-Mart vice president said the 
moniker
was "a bit of a pun," stemming from the conference room's use by tax-department
employees to conduct safety drills for natural disasters such as tornadoes."



--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com

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