{news} Fw: Corporate Income Taxes Down

Tom Sevigny capeconn at comcast.net
Wed Sep 22 16:53:36 EDT 2004


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Greg LeRoy 
To: goodjobs at goodjobsfirst.org 
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 2004 4:19 PM
Subject: Corporate Income Taxes Down


For Immediate Release, September 22, 2004 
Contact: Bob McIntyre, 202/626-3780, ext. 22 

Bush Policies Drive Surge in Corporate Tax Freeloading 
82 Big U.S. Corporations Paid No Tax in One or More Bush Years 

Washington, DC -- Eighty-two of America's largest and most profitable corporations paid no federal income tax in at least one year during the first three years of the George W. Bush administration - a period when federal corporate tax collections fell to their lowest sustained level in six decades. 

This is one of the many troubling findings of a major new report on corporate tax avoidance by Citizens for Tax Justice (CTJ) and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP). The report covered 275 profitable Fortune 500 corporations, with total U.S. profits of $1.1 trillion over the three-year period.

The report, "Corporate Income Taxes in the Bush Years," is available at www.itepnet.org 

"The sharp increase in the number of tax-avoiding companies reflects the results of aggressive corporate lobbying and a White House and a Congress eager to do the lobbyists' bidding," said Robert S. McIntyre, director of CTJ and co-author of the report with T.D. Coo Nguyen of ITEP. 

Skyrocketing Corporate Tax Avoidance 

In part due to a major expansion in corporate tax breaks in 2002 and 2003, along with continued failure by Congress and the White House to curb abusive corporate offshore tax sheltering, corporate tax avoidance has skyrocketed. For example:

"       Eighty-two of the 275 companies, almost a third of the total, paid zero or less in federal income taxes in at least one year from 2001 to 2003. Many of them enjoyed multiple no-tax years. In the years they paid no income tax, these companies reported $102 billion in pretax U.S. profits. But instead of paying $35.6 billion in income taxes as the statutory 35 percent corporate tax rate seems to require, these companies generated so many excess tax breaks that they received outright tax rebate checks from the U.S. Treasury, totaling $12.6 billion. These companies' "negative tax rates" meant that they made more after taxes than before taxes in those no-tax years. 

"       Twenty-eight corporations enjoyed negative federal income tax rates over the entire 2001-03 period. These companies, whose pretax U.S. profits totaled $44.9 billion over the three years, included, among others: Pepco Holdings (-59.6% tax rate), Prudential Financial (-46.2%), ITT Industries (-22.3%), Boeing (-18.8%), Unisys (-16.0%), Fluor (-9.2%) and CSX (-7.5%), the company previously headed by our current Secretary of the Treasury.

"       In 2003 alone, 46 companies paid zero or less in federal income taxes. These 46 companies, almost one out of six of the companies in the study, reported U.S. pretax profits in 2003 of $42.6 billion, yet received tax rebates totaling $5.4 billion. In 2002, almost as many companies, 42, paid no tax, reporting $43.5 billion in pretax profits, but $4.9 billion in tax rebates. From 2001 to 2003, the number of no-tax companies jumped from 33 to 46, an increase of 40 percent. 

"       After 2001, the average effective rate for all 275 companies dropped by a fifth, from 21.4 percent in 2001 to 17.2 percent in 2002 and 2003, less than half the statutory 35 percent corporate tax rate that corporations ostensibly are supposed to pay. 

The Size of the Corporate Tax Subsidies 

Over the 2001-03 period, the 275 companies in the survey earned almost $1.1 trillion in pretax profits in the United States. Had all of those profits been reported to the IRS and taxed at the statutory 35 percent corporate tax rate, the 275 companies would have paid $370 billion in income taxes over the three years. But instead, the companies reported only about half of their profits - $557 billion - to the IRS. Over the three years, the effective tax rate on the companies as a group was only about half the ostensibly required 35 percent rate.

"       Loopholes and other tax subsidies cut taxes for the 275 companies by $43.4 billion in 2001, $60.8 billion in 2002 and $71.0 billion in 2003, for a total of $175.2 billion in tax breaks over the three years.

"       Half of the total tax-break dollars over the three years - $87.1 billion - went to just25 companies, each with more than a billion-and-a-half dollars in tax breaks.

"       General Electric topped the list of corporate tax break recipients, with $9.5 billion in tax breaks over the three years.

"       In 2002 and 2003, the 275 companies sheltered more than half of their profits from tax. They told their shareholders they earned $739 billion in those two years, but they told the IRS they made less than half of that, only $363 billion.

The Failure of Corporate Tax Incentives 

Legislation adopted in 2002 and 2003 vastly increased corporate write-offs for 
"accelerated depreciation" and made it easier for corporations to use their excess tax subsidies to generate tax-rebate checks from the U.S. Treasury, at a three-year cost of $175 billion. Backers of those so-called "incentives" said they would encourage new corporate investments in plant and equipment. But the study finds that they failed to do so.

"       The 25 companies in the study who reported the largest tax savings from accelerated depreciation - garnering two-thirds of the total depreciation benefits for all 275 companies over the three years - cut their total property, plant and equipment investments by 27 percent from 2001 to 2003.

"       In contrast, the remaining 250 companies reduced their investments by only 8 percent. 

"       Overall, the 275 companies in the study reported that their capital investments fell by 15 percent from 2001 to 2003. Likewise, the 25 companies in the survey with the largest total tax breaks from all sources over the three years (getting half of the total tax breaks for all 275 companies) cut their capital investments from 2001 to 2003 by 22 percent. In contrast, the remaining 250 companies in the survey reduced their investments by 13 percent.

 "We do not mean to imply in our report that corporate tax breaks actively discourage capital investments," McIntyre said. "But the evidence shows, as it has so often in the past, that business investment decisions are primarily driven by supply and demand, not by government attempts to micro-manage the economy. The $175 billion in revenues lost to the tax subsidies enacted in 2002 and 2003 appears to have been exceedingly poorly spent."

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