Inverted Values
By
Phil Mattera, Dirt
Diggers Digest
Conservatives are up in arms about the surge of undocumented
women and children coming across the border from Mexico. So great a threat is
purportedly being caused by this influx that Republican members of Congress are
clamoring for legislation that would allow faster deportations. Even President
Obama seems to agree.
Much less urgency is being expressed about another sort of
immigration crisis: the presence of a growing number of foreign-based
corporations masquerading as American companies. Large-scale tax dodging by
these firms does much more harm to the United States than the modest impact of
those desperate Central Americans.
Yet these companies go on operating as before, keeping their
U.S. offices, their U.S. sales and all the other benefits of doing business
here but not paying their fair share of the cost of government. They are the
real illegitimate aliens.
While a few members of Congress have spoken out against this
corporate treason, many adhere to the idea that the companies are blameless —
that it is the supposedly oppressive tax system that is to blame. The
editorialists at the Wall Street Journal, who can always be counted
on to go to any length to defend corporate avarice, recently began a piece on
inversions by writing: “What kind of country does this to itself?”
This is typical of the pro-corporate mindset: Big business,
apparently, can do no wrong, so if a company does something controversial, it
is the rest of us who are to blame.
In reality, many of the companies that have turned to inversions
are not only tax dodgers; they are bad actors in other respects. Take the case
of Medtronic, which is involved in the most recent re-registration deal
involving a plan to merge with Covidien, a competitor in the medical devices
industry that earlier turned itself into an “Irish” company.
Only a couple of weeks before the Covidien deal became public,
the U.S. Justice Department announced that
Medtronic would pay $9.9 million to resolve allegations under the False Claims
Act that it made improper payments to physicians to get them to implant the
company’s pacemakers and defibrillators in Medicare and Medicaid patients.
The
settlement came less than three years after Medtronic had to pay $23.5 million to resolve another False Claims Act case involving
other kinds of improper inducements to physicians.
And five years before that, Medtronic paid $40 million
to settle yet another kickback case. In 2010 the company had to pay $268
million to settle lawsuits claiming that defective wires in its defibrillators
caused at least 13 deaths.
An even worse track
record belongs to Pfizer, which
attempted an inversion a couple of months ago by seeking to acquire Britain’s
AstraZeneca but has backed off for now. In 2009 Pfizer agreed to pay
$2.3 billion to resolve criminal and civil charges relating to the
improper marketing of Bextra and three other medications. The amount was a
record for a healthcare fraud settlement.
John Kopchinski, a former Pfizer
sales representative whose complaint helped bring about the federal
investigation, told the New
York Times: “The whole culture of Pfizer is driven by sales, and if you
didn’t sell drugs illegally, you were not seen as a team player.”
Like Medtronic, Pfizer has had problems with questionable
payments. In August 2012 the SEC announced that it had reached a $45 million settlement with
the company to resolve charges that its subsidiaries, especially Wyeth, had
bribed overseas doctors and other healthcare professionals to increase foreign
sales.
Or take the case of Walgreen, which is reported to
be planning an inversion of its own. In 2008 it had to pay $35 million to settle claims
that it defrauded the federal government by improperly switching patients to
different version of three prescription drugs in order to increase its
reimbursements from Medicaid. Last year, the Drug Enforcement
Administration announced that
the giant pharmacy chain would pay a record $80 million in civil penalties to
resolve charges that it failed to properly control the sales of narcotic
painkillers at some of its stores.
The examples could continue. Corporations resorting to extreme
measures such as foreign re-incorporations are not innocent victims. Their tax
dodging is just another symptom of corporate cultures that put profit
maximization above loyalty to country and adherence to the law.