Does Big Company Tax Evasion Annoy Average Citizens?

by francine Hardaway on November 11, 2010

This is a rant.

I’ve been taught that in America, we live by the Rule of Law. This is beginning to sound increasingly mysterious to me lately.

How come I have to live by the Rule of Law, but others do not?
How come I have to put my dog on a leash in the park, when he’s not bothering anybody else?
How come I can risk jail for smoking a joint?
How come when the IRS calls me, I have to come in for an audit and pay $35,000 in back taxes I don’t have and can’t afford to fight?

Because the “other half” does not have to live under the Rule of Law: rather, it makes the law.

Google Inc. cut its taxes by $3.1 billion in the last three years using a technique that moves most of its foreign profits through Ireland and the Netherlands to Bermuda.

Google’s income shifting — involving strategies known to lawyers as the “Double Irish” and the “Dutch Sandwich” — helped reduce its overseas tax rate to 2.4 percent, the lowest of the top five U.S. technology companies by market capitalization, according to regulatory filings in six countries.

“It’s remarkable that Google’s effective rate is that low,” saidMartin A. Sullivan, a tax economist who formerly worked for the U.S. Treasury Department. “We know this company operates throughout the world mostly in high-tax countries where the average corporate rate is well over 20 percent.”

The U.S. corporate income-tax rate is 35 percent. In the U.K., Google’s second-biggest market by revenue, it’s 28 percent.

Google, the owner of the world’s most popular search engine, uses a strategy that has gained favor among such companies as Facebook Inc. and Microsoft Corp. The method takes advantage of Irish tax law to legally shuttle profits into and out of subsidiaries there, largely escaping the country’s 12.5 percent income tax. (See an interactive graphic on Google’s tax strategy here.)

As a result of these tax strategies, a small number of people make big money as Google investors, and a somewhat larger number are on salaries and free food working for Google. And I’m not picking on Google, because many other countries use the “double Irish” strategy, or the office in the Cayman Islands strategy.

The rest of us, about 290 million of us, shoulder both the tax burden and the burden of the service cuts when the tax revenues fall short.

Copyright@akdutchman

All it takes to avoid the “rule of law” is to have the money. Yesterday, the President’s Budget Commission reported that

75 percent of the deficit reduction effort should come from spending cuts and 25 percent from revenue increases.

[Erskine] Bowles also called for capping government spending at 21 percent of the overall economy. Government spending now accounts for 24 percent of the economy and could rise to 27 percent, according to Republican Senator Judd Gregg, who is also a panel member.

He said he would also like to see a broadening of the tax base and simplifying of the tax code which would require hundreds of individual and business tax breaks to be eliminated.

These so-called tax expenditures, such as the mortgage interest deduction, are a popular way for lawmakers to direct economic activity and encourage investment in housing and other areas such as ethanol production.

Those tax benefits, however, cost the federal treasury about $1 trillion a year and generally result in higher income tax rates for everyone else.

“I would like to see us take a hard look at tax expenditures,” Bowles said, adding that they amounted to government spending by a different name. Bowles said he favors lowering corporate and individual income tax rates and putting in place a tax on consumption.

Here we go. The middle class is going to take it in the shorts again.

How long before the riots begin in the streets? How long before I refuse to put my dog on a leash while the big dogs in the Caymans run free?

{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

John Hunter November 12, 2010 at 4:16 am

Yes, it bothers me. I wrote about this in 2006, Why Pay Taxes or be Honest. It absolutely drives me crazy that companies make obviously false claims to not pay what they owe. If they want to be foreign companies fine leave. If you want to stay and yet avoid paying your share, you should be treated as the disrespectful anti-American you are.If they are not breaking the law, fine don’t hold them criminally responsible (though I really suspect some of this has to be illegal). But your anti-American behavior being not quite so bad that you are criminally liable is not the same thing as your actions being justified, reasonable or even acceptable in a society that is should be based on a social contract where everyone contributes. It is so sad that the wealthiest are so quick to avoid their responsibilities and yet truly think they are doing nothing wrong. I just don’t understand how those that get so much from this country (as I do) act so disrespectfully toward it.Congress is paid to enable the behavior and does so (and is definitely deserving of criticism for selling out the country also). But we elect them over and over, after they show this is what they will do, so it is our will. I wish our will would change but I am in the minority. My posts on ethics.

hardaway November 12, 2010 at 1:07 pm

Don’t get me started on ethics. We have no ethics left in business, just empty religiosityrnrnFrancine Hardaway, Ph DrnGV: 816.WRITTEN

Dave November 12, 2010 at 4:43 pm

Can someone please point out where google broke the law? As far as I can tell, they did not. They simply took advantage of every possible legal means to reduce their tax burden. Which is no different than what you and I do.nnnn

hardaway November 12, 2010 at 5:15 pm

They didn’t. But the big companies pay lobbyists to pass laws with loopholes that cost the country dearly.rnrnFrancine Hardaway, PH.drn@hardawayrn816.WRITTENrnrnHttp://www.Stealthmode.com

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