This is a somewhat long article from the NYT showing how GE and other multinational corporations have greatly reduced the amount of taxes they are paying in the US and how the US isn't getting much in return from the tax benefits and loopholes the corporations are exploiting. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42260137/ns/business-us_business Here are some excerpts. [rquoter] How G.E. made $5.1 billion in the U.S. tax-free Company is arguably the most masterful at limiting how much it pays General Electric, the nation’s largest corporation, had a very good year in 2010. The company reported worldwide profits of $14.2 billion, and said $5.1 billion of the total came from its operations in the United States. Its American tax bill? None. In fact, G.E. claimed a tax benefit of $3.2 billion. That may be hard to fathom for the millions of American business owners and households now preparing their own returns, but low taxes are nothing new for G.E. The company has been cutting the percentage of its American profits paid to the Internal Revenue Service for years, resulting in a far lower rate than at most multinational companies. Its extraordinary success is based on an aggressive strategy that mixes fierce lobbying for tax breaks and innovative accounting that enables it to concentrate its profits offshore. G.E.’s giant tax department, led by a bespectacled, bow-tied former Treasury official named John Samuels, is often referred to as the world’s best tax law firm. Indeed, the company’s slogan “Imagination at Work” fits this department well. The team includes former officials not just from the Treasury, but also from the I.R.S. and virtually all the tax-writing committees in Congress. While General Electric is one of the most skilled at reducing its tax burden, many other companies have become better at this as well. Although the top corporate tax rate in the United States is 35 percent, one of the highest in the world, companies have been increasingly using a maze of shelters, tax credits and subsidies to pay far less. In a regulatory filing just a week before the Japanese disaster put a spotlight on the company’s nuclear reactor business, G.E. reported that its tax burden was 7.4 percent of its American profits, about a third of the average reported by other American multinationals. Even those figures are overstated, because they include taxes that will be paid only if the company brings its overseas profits back to the United States. With those profits still offshore, G.E. is effectively getting money back. Such strategies, as well as changes in tax laws that encouraged some businesses and professionals to file as individuals, have pushed down the corporate share of the nation’s tax receipts — from 30 percent of all federal revenue in the mid-1950s to 6.6 percent in 2009. Yet many companies say the current level is so high it hobbles them in competing with foreign rivals. Even as the government faces a mounting budget deficit, the talk in Washington is about lower rates. President Obama has said he is considering an overhaul of the corporate tax system, with an eye to lowering the top rate, ending some tax subsidies and loopholes and generating the same amount of revenue. He has designated G.E.’s chief executive, Jeffrey R. Immelt, as his liaison to the business community and as the chairman of the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, and it is expected to discuss corporate taxes. ... Over the last decade, G.E. has spent tens of millions of dollars to push for changes in tax law, from more generous depreciation schedules on jet engines to “green energy” credits for its wind turbines. But the most lucrative of these measures allows G.E. to operate a vast leasing and lending business abroad with profits that face little foreign taxes and no American taxes as long as the money remains overseas. ... The assortment of tax breaks G.E. has won in Washington has provided a significant short-term gain for the company’s executives and shareholders. While the financial crisis led G.E. to post a loss in the United States in 2009, regulatory filings show that in the last five years, G.E. has accumulated $26 billion in American profits, and received a net tax benefit from the I.R.S. of $4.1 billion. But critics say the use of so many shelters amounts to corporate welfare, allowing G.E. not just to avoid taxes on profitable overseas lending but also to amass tax credits and write-offs that can be used to reduce taxes on billions of dollars of profit from domestic manufacturing. They say that the assertive tax avoidance of multinationals like G.E. not only shortchanges the Treasury, but also harms the economy by discouraging investment and hiring in the United States. ... As it has evolved, the company has used, and in some cases pioneered, aggressive strategies to lower its tax bill. In the mid-1980s, President Ronald Reagan overhauled the tax system after learning that G.E. — a company for which he had once worked as a commercial pitchman — was among dozens of corporations that had used accounting gamesmanship to avoid paying any taxes. “I didn’t realize things had gotten that far out of line,” Mr. Reagan told the Treasury secretary, Donald T. Regan, according to Mr. Regan’s 1988 memoir. The president supported a change that closed loopholes and forced G.E. to pay a far higher effective rate, up to 32.5 percent. That pendulum began to swing back in the late 1990s. G.E. and other financial services firms won a change in tax law that would allow multinationals to avoid taxes on some kinds of banking and insurance income. The change meant that if G.E. financed the sale of a jet engine or generator in Ireland, for example, the company would no longer have to pay American tax on the interest income as long as the profits remained offshore. Known as active financing, the tax break proved to be beneficial for investment banks, brokerage firms, auto and farm equipment companies, and lenders like GE Capital. This tax break allowed G.E. to avoid taxes on lending income from abroad, and also permitted the company to amass tax credits, write-offs and depreciation. Those benefits are then used to offset taxes on its American manufacturing profits. ... “Cracking down on offshore profit-shifting by financial companies like G.E. was one of the important achievements of President Reagan’s 1986 Tax Reform Act,” said Robert S. McIntyre, director of the liberal group Citizens for Tax Justice, who played a key role in those changes. “The fact that Congress was snookered into undermining that reform at the behest of companies like G.E. is an insult not just to Reagan, but to all the ordinary American taxpayers who have to foot the bill for G.E.’s rampant tax sheltering.” ... By 2008, however, concern over the growing cost of overseas tax loopholes put G.E. and other corporations on the defensive. With Democrats in control of both houses of Congress, momentum was building to let the active financing exception expire. Mr. Rangel of the Ways and Means Committee indicated that he favored letting it end and directing the new revenue — an estimated $4 billion a year — to other priorities. G.E. pushed back. In addition to the $18 million allocated to its in-house lobbying department, the company spent more than $3 million in 2008 on lobbying firms assigned to the task. Mr. Rangel dropped his opposition to the tax break. Representative Joseph Crowley, Democrat of New York, said he had helped sway Mr. Rangel by arguing that the tax break would help Citigroup, a major employer in Mr. Crowley’s district. G.E. officials say that neither Mr. Samuels nor any lobbyists working on behalf of the company discussed the possibility of a charitable donation with Mr. Rangel. The only contact had come in late 2007, a company spokesman said, when Mr. Immelt called to inform Mr. Rangel that the foundation was giving money to schools in his district. ... Value to Americans? While G.E.’s declining tax rates have bolstered profits and helped the company continue paying dividends to shareholders during the economic downturn, some tax experts question what taxpayers are getting in return. Since 2002, the company has eliminated a fifth of its work force in the United States while increasing overseas employment. In that time, G.E.’s accumulated offshore profits have risen to $92 billion from $15 billion. “That G.E. can almost set its own tax rate shows how very much we need reform,” said Representative Lloyd Doggett, Democrat of Texas, who has proposed closing many corporate tax shelters. “Our tax system should encourage job creation and investment in America and end these tax incentives for exporting jobs and dodging responsibility for the cost of securing our country.” [/rquoter]
I saw this this morning and was going to start a thread on it. It's really flabbergasting whenever the usual suspects complain about corporate income taxes in the US when they're effectively so low, or in GE's case, negative - the gall some of these companies have is incredible.
The NYTimes barely scratched the surface of how much money GE is stealing from you and I. They are the greatest example of a company that fully exploits the government's desire to manage the economy. No matter what the government tries to do, GE has lobbyists on the front end trying to change the law to benefit them, and analysts on the back end trying to figure out how to exploit it. They are Tim Carney's (the best muckracker today) favorite subject. http://townhall.com/columnists/timcarney/2011/01/25/government_electric
And the usual suspect is defending the highest corporate tax rate in the world because a giant, K-street corporation knows how to avoid their effects, while conveniently ignoring the damage they do to entrepreneurship.
How is the negative 20% that GE pays in a good year "the highest corporate tax rate in the world" Did you even read the article? What do you think is more important to the economic decisions an actor makes? The hypothetical tax rate that it might have to pay, or the effective tax rate that it actually pays?
Congress needs to eliminate the loopholes and lower the rate, which will result in more revenue. Congress goes to a lot of trouble to create various loopholes and incentives, but the only companies to benefit are the companies with best tax departments. Why do we need a complex tax system?
Ha, that's not REALLY what Cato, GE, the libertarian Koch Brothers etc want - it has nothing to do with elimination of complexity or raising government revenues, and everything to do with raising their own revenues and aggregate ever more capital. They're acting in their own self-interest, as we should expect. They want us to get down to the level of tax havens/fiscal basketcases like Ireland and Iceland, no matter how good or bad it is for the country as a whole. (Sidenote: The Austrian Austerity doctors are hard at work in Ireland! THe bloodletting continues and its economy continues to shrink as the magic austerity leeches fail to generate magic gains). So they use dupes who bang the "hurting our small businesses!" drum to accomplish this. Win win!
At this point, I don't care how many millions or billions corporations make off of loopholes. The government could double the tax collections across the board and still spend in a deficit year after year. How much are we spending by sticking our nose in Libya alone? We want to ignore the trillions of dollars in blunders all of our politicians have made over the past decade and make it out like big business is the root of the problem.
weslinder lives in a neo-jeffersonian candyland, where if we just imposed randian/paulista economics, large MNC's and Big Banks would magically fall and the small businessman would reign supreme in a some sort of pluralistic fantasy. Really the opposite is what happens in practice. HERPADERPDERP
It makes me sick to watch all of the GE "clean energy" commercials knowing all of that crap is tax payer funded.
Funny thing is, if we simplified the tax code, we could probably lower the tax rate by half and end up collecting more revenue for the state in the end. A complex tax system is a smart/crafty/sneaky/dishonest man's best friend, while a simple one is the bane of his existence.
You're a funny dude. "CLOSING TAX LOOPHOLES WON'T HELP SO WHY BOTHER" Imagine this applied more globally: "REDUCING RAPES WON'T NECESSARILY HELP THE OVERALL CRIME RATE SO WHY BOTHER" Pretty much.
The article brings up fair and good points but the negative bias the author writes with is annoying to me. Yes GE is being a bad corporate citizen by avoiding taxes in this egregious fashion, but the author makes it sound like everything that GE does is bad and that GE runs Obama. Just because GE makes a business decision to go with the changes in government policy doesn't mean they are running a corrupt business.
They're not running a corrupt business, they're running an entirely rational one which puts corporate interest over US national interests -> as they should. That's why they exist. The issue is when people/media/etc say we/the govt. need to constantly listen to business leaders etc about what's good for America. In the olden days, pre-globalization, there was actually a substantial amount of truth in the old "What's good for GM is good for America" becausee most of GM, from ownership on down, was pretty much all in America. There were no "Double Irish" tax dodges, because Ireland was a festering, civilly unstable dump. Today, that's simply not the case anymore, Business leaders will tell us what is good for them, and tell us that it is good for America - regardless of whether or not it's good for America.
that sounds too logical...it'll never happen...Sad to say but as long as there are lobbyist and US companies doing business internationally, there will always be tax shelters to keep profits offshore and reinvest elsewhere...
So you prefer a system where the accountants and tax lawyers make all of the money and the United States owes money to GE. When did you become a republican?