States like South Dakota have become the go-to places for the rich to hide their money
By SAM PIZZIGATI,
Inequality.org
in Common Dreams
We've become accustomed, over recent decades, to see Americans front and center whenever a blockbuster new report spotlights the world's super rich.
Last
month, for instance, Bloomberg reporters tracked down the
world's 25 richest families. Ten of the 25 happened to come from the United
States. No other nation had more than four.
Researchers
from Wealth-X released new data last month as well. Their eighth annual
Billionaire Census counted 3,204
personal fortunes of at least 10 digits worldwide. Leading the way: the United
States of America, with 927 such fortunes, more than Germany, Russia, the UK,
Hong Kong, Switzerland, India, Saudi Arabia, France, and Italy combined.
A
bit earlier this year, the Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse published the 2021
edition of its annual Global Wealth Report, tallying up 215,030
adults on the international scene with fortunes worth over $50 million.
Americans made up 110,850—55 percent—of that total.
Now we've seen the release of still another blockbuster look at the world's super rich. This one—now known the world over by the simple shorthand of the "Pandora Papers"—has come courtesy of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.
The group worked with news organizations from 117 nations to analyze over 11.9 million documents leaked out of 14 offshore financial firms. What those firms all have in common: They provide confidential "administrative services" for financial pros who specialize in concealing the wealth of the world's deepest pockets.
Out
of the 2.94 terabytes of
Pandora Papers data have already emerged the clearest profile yet of what's
become known as the global "wealth defense industry," that vast
network of lawyers, accountants, and various other financial pros who devote
their considerable expertise to shielding grand private fortunes from their
national tax collectors—and, in many cases, police and prosecutors as well.
The
Pandora Papers investigators have named names in their stunning coverage.
They've exposed the tax-dodging financial machinations of individual "rich
and famous" from every corner of the known Earth. But in this blockbuster
report, unlike all the other major recent deep dives into worldwide grand
fortune, wealthy Americans do not at all dominate. The vast majority of the
super rich the Pandora Papers have uncloaked come from outside the confines of
the US of A.
America's
most familiar super rich simply do not appear in the Pandora Papers coverage.
No sign of Jeff Bezos or Elon Musk or Bill Gates or any of the other U.S. mega
billionaires who top the just-released annual
Forbes 400 list of America's richest. The over 130 billionaires worldwide who
do appear in the Pandora Papers treasure trove include just a few scattered
fantastically rich Americans.
"Only
a handful of U.S. billionaires," observe Peter
Whoriskey and Agustin Armendariz in the Washington Post, "show up in the
records."
How
could that be—when Americans so dominate the ranks of the global super rich?
Are America's super wealthiest simply behaving more nobly than their peers
elsewhere and refusing to engage in shifty financial games to shield their
fortunes?
Let's get real here. The relative absence of U.S. billionaires in the Pandora Papers has nothing whatsoever to do with nobility. We're talking accessibility here. The U.S. super rich have plenty of financial agents—the tax attorneys, accountants, and wealth managers, as my Institute for Policy Studies colleague Chuck Collins puts it, "paid millions to help billionaires sequester trillions"—close to home.
They don't need to partake of the services provided by wealth advisory
firms in places like Samoa, Cyprus, and Singapore, or any of the other 11
offshore locales from where the Pandora Papers leaked.
One
other dynamic also helps explain why so few U.S. billionaires have been showing
up in the Pandora Papers coverage. America's super rich, as one Pandora Papers
report notes,
"pay so little in taxes relative to their incomes that hiding money
offshore" can turn out to be "mostly unnecessary." Our
contemporary U.S. tax code essentially expects precious little from the super
rich at tax time and furnishes convenient, perfectly legal workarounds to the
taxes the law does stipulate.
How
effective have these workarounds become? This past June, analysts at
ProPublica gleaned from
a massive leak of IRS data that America's 25 richest paid taxes on the $401
billion they gained from 2014 to 2018 at an incredibly tiny true tax rate of a
mere 3.4 percent.
But
don't take the small U.S. billionaire footprint in the Pandora Papers exposé as
any indication of disinterest in tax havens on the part of Americans. Quite the
contrary. The Pandora Papers make dramatically clear that the United States has
now become a premiere "offshore" tax haven for super rich the world
over.
To
be more exact: A handful of low-population U.S. states—led by South
Dakota—have essentially turned themselves into pimps for global
plutocrats. They've enacted a series of state laws that let financial agents
set up shop within their borders and then go on to service and shield grand
foreign fortunes. The "dynasty trusts" these states harbor are helping
the super rich worldwide cloak their grand private fortunes in a gloriously
lucrative anonymity.
The
Pandora Papers abound in the stories of these global rich. A shady former vice
president of the Dominican Republic, for instance, had built up a huge fortune
as the president of a giant Dominican sugar company notorious for violating the
human rights of its workers. In 2019, this deepest of Dominican pockets shifted a
major chunk of his ill-gotten wealth into a South Dakota dynasty trust.
South
Dakota, note tax
analysts Bob Lord and Kalena Thomhave, now safe harbors $500 billion in trust
assets, up 36 percent since 2019. In the process, charges journalist
Timothy Noah, the state has become a "moral sewer."
Our
U.S. contribution to the global concentration of wealth, the Pandora Papers
help us understand, has become frighteningly enormous. We're not just bending
over backwards these days to grow the fortunes of our home-grown super rich.
We're helping grow the fortunes of the super wealthy all over the world. We're
no longer just dominating the world's billionaire ranks. We're helping those
ranks worldwide become ever more dominant.
Sam Pizzigati co-edits Inequality.org. His recent
books include: "The Case for a Maximum Wage" (2018) and "The Rich Don't
Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American
Middle Class, 1900-1970" (2012).