A
New Generation of Corporate Tax Traitors
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
A scene we'd all like to see |
Large
U.S.-based corporations have long demonstrated that they are willing to put
profits before patriotism.
Over the past two decades, about two dozen of those
companies have moved their legal headquarters offshore in order to drastically
reduce their federal tax obligations.
This disreputable practice is once again
in vogue and being brought to a new level by Pfizer’s effort to acquire
AstraZeneca and register the combined operation in the United Kingdom. The big
Walgreen drugstore chain is also considering a foreign reincorporation move.
Today
there is surprisingly little anger over Pfizer’s plan. In fact, the business
press is filled with articles indicating that numerous
other companies are thinking along the same lines. Pfizer is facing some
opposition, but it is mainly in Britain, where the company’s CEO Ian Read
(photo) was grilled by members of parliament concerned that the merger will
have a negative impact on employment at AstraZeneca.
While
Pfizer has been quite open about the tax dodging aspect of its takeover bid,
companies involved in inversions tend to justify their move by emphasizing the global
nature of their business.
The problem with this argument is that it is not
supported by the facts. The companies that reincorporate abroad continue to do
more business in the United States than in any other country. For example, the
purportedly Irish company Ingersoll-Rand derives 59 percent of its revenues
from the United States and has 80 percent of its long-lived assets in that
country.
Inverted
companies usually continue to trade on U.S. stock exchanges and keep their real
headquarters at home. They also continue to win contract awards from the
federal government. Accenture, another company claiming to be Irish, does more than $1 billion a year in
business with Uncle Sam.
Along
with their federal tax avoidance, many of the turncoat companies also take
widespread advantage of tax breaks and other economic development subsidies
from state and local governments. Here are some of the aggregate totals
assembled by my colleagues and me at Good Jobs First for our Subsidy
Tracker database:
- Eaton: $101 million
- Pentair: $33.2 million
- Accenture: $15.4 million
- Tyco International: $13.9 million
- Delphi Automotive: $9.6 million
- Ingersoll-Rand: $5.6 million
If
Pfizer succeeds in its bid, it would add another $200 million to this list, plus $9.2 million that has gone to
AstraZeneca’s U.S. operations. Walgreen has received more than $12 million in subsidies.
Along
with showing little loyalty to the United States, the corporate tax traitors do
not hesitate to abandon their adopted countries when it is financially
advantageous to do so. A number of the companies that had reincorporated in
Bermuda and the Cayman Islands in the late 1990s and early 2000s subsequently
moved to Europe. These include Ingersoll-Rand, Tyco International and Seagate
Technology.
Doing
so allowed them to avoid the stigma and legal complications of being based in
Caribbean tax havens while still enjoying the relatively low corporate tax
rates provided by countries such as Ireland and Switzerland. Britain, the
intended new home of Pfizer, is now also regarded as one of the more
respectable tax haven destinations.
While
pretending to be Irish or Swiss or British may be regarded as more acceptable
than pretending to be Bermudan, what these companies are doing is still brazen
tax dodging and a betrayal of the country that helped them grow into corporate
behemoths in the first place.
After
the inversion controversies of the early 2000s, Congress took action that
thwarted the practice.
In today’s political climate in Washington, it is
unlikely that restrictions will be placed on the new generation of runaway
corporations. Business apologists are already using the Pfizer deal not as a
call to arms to block more relocations but rather as an argument for giving in
to longstanding demands to gut what remains of the corporate income tax.
According
to this warped logic, the United States will solve the tax haven problem only
by becoming one itself.