It also hurts everyone else
By J. Kelly Conklin
Recent revelations that Walmart, the world's biggest corporation, is maintaining secret subsidiaries in well-known offshore tax havens are outrageous but far from surprising to small business owners.
By J. Kelly Conklin
Recent revelations that Walmart, the world's biggest corporation, is maintaining secret subsidiaries in well-known offshore tax havens are outrageous but far from surprising to small business owners.
That's because
we're used to seeing large corporations abuse the tax system in ways that hurt
our businesses, communities and families. Walmart's hidden web of 78
subsidiaries in 15 tax havens, unveiled in a report by Americans for Tax
Fairness (ATF), is just the latest example. Let's hope it spurs reform.
ATF says Walmart may have skirted U.S. securities law by not
properly reporting its tax-haven subsidiaries. But even if hiding them runs
afoul of the law, using tax havens to avoid U.S. taxes is perfectly legal.
A good example lies, ironically, right next to my local Walmart: a
traffic-choked, 90-year-old highway desperately needing repair. My
cabinet-making company recently had to pay $2,300 to install a new suspension
system in a delivery van ravaged by potholes.
Now there's talk in Washington of
taxing the offshore profits of companies like Walmart to help fix highways. It
may be a worthwhile solution -- if it isn't hijacked by those in Congress who
want to give corporations even more tax cuts.
Walmart is not alone among big, profitable American corporations
using well-known tax-avoidance strategies. In one recent five-year period,
famous corporate names like General Electric, Verizon, Boeing and PriceLine.com
paid zero federal income taxes, according to Citizens for Tax Justice. It's
outrageous that my small business paid more federal income taxes in one year
than all of these huge companies combined paid in five years!
Small businesses can't afford an army of accountants and tax
lawyers like Walmart can to create offshore tax-avoidance strategies. None of
us have shell corporations in Luxembourg (a country smaller than Rhode Island
and with just half the population).
Walmart has 22 paper subsidiaries there,
holding $64 billion in assets. And none of us would get away with paying just 1
percent in taxes -- but that's what Walmart paid Luxembourg between 2010 and
2013, on over a billion dollars in profits.
Even if we could pull off such financial shenanigans, I honestly
believe most of us wouldn't want to. We'd rather contribute what we should to
the public good and see our communities thrive right alongside our businesses.
Meanwhile, corporate tax dodging flourishes. For instance,
American corporations owe U.S. tax on all their profits earned overseas (less
any foreign taxes paid). But a loophole called "deferral" lets them
delay paying their U.S. bill until the company brings those profits home. That's
why American corporations have $2 trillion in profits stashed offshore.
It makes sense that federal officials are looking to that big cash
hoard as a source of highway funding: the federal highway trust fund is going
broke and Congress refuses to raise the gas tax to replenish it. But dont be
fooled by two similar sounding proposals for tapping that offshore money that
are actually very different -- and keep in mind a third option that makes the
most sense of all.
The worst idea -- a repatriation tax holiday -- would let
companies voluntarily bring their profits home at a tax rate of about 6 percent
-- way below the normal 35 percent corporate rate. A similar holiday was tried
in 2004, and all it did was enrich shareholders and executives, creating few if
any jobs, according to a Congressional report.
President Obama would require corporations to pay tax on their
offshore profits whether they brought them home or not. But the proposed rate
of 14 percent is so low that 10 companies alone would enjoy an $82-billion tax-cut
bonanza over the next decade, according to Citizens for Tax Justice.
The simplest and fairest solution would be to end the deferral
loophole and tax corporations at the 35 percent rate on all their income
wherever it is earned. This will eliminate corporations' incentives to hide
profits in tax havens and ship jobs offshore.
Like a lot of other corporations, Walmart is apparently banking on
some form of tax holiday winning out. That's why it's shifting more and more of
its profits into tax havens. But it's small businesses that need the holiday: a
permanent holiday from big corporations damaging our businesses and communities
by gaming the tax system.
Conklin is co-owner of Foley-Waite, LLC, of Kenilworth, NJ, and
serves on the executive committee of the Main Street Alliance.