Top Ten Corporate Tax Dodgers

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Minor Axis

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Top Ten Corporate Tax Dodgers... why? Because we let them. Because they are made of people whose sole morality is gold and we have a corrupt government. If you look at the article see how much these companies spend in lobbying.

1. GE--->>>$10 Billion in profits (3 years), paid no Federal Taxes and earned $4.7 BILLION in Federal rebates. U.S. tax payers paid them $4.7 Billion. This is FUCKING BULLSHIT.
2. Wells Fargo
3. Verizon (12 billion in tax subsides)
4. PG&E
5. Corning
6. Boeing
7. Mattel
8. Duke
9. Dupont
10. American Electric Power (2.6 billion in tax subsides)
 
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CityGirl

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This is the welfare that goes unaddressed in this country. The few in the bottom 20% who abuse the welfare system get all the attention while the perpetrators of even greater welfare abuses skate on by....


The Corporate Tax-Dodge Code

Wolf Richter www.testosteronepit.com

Between 2002 and 2011, Boeing reported to its investors that it earned $31.8 billion. But it reported something entirely different to the IRS and didn’t pay income taxes. Instead, it received tax benefits of $2.06 billion, an effective tax rate of -6.5% (CTJ fact sheet). Other companies were similarly agile. Bailed-out GE earned $10.5 billion, paid zero taxes, and received $4.7 billion in tax benefits. Of 280 companies that the CTJ researched (report), 30 paid no federal income taxes from 2008-2010. They were all using loopholes, subsidies, and offshore strategies to do what the tax code encouraged them to do: dodge taxes.

So now, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is ballyhooing President Obama's latest election-year ploy of putting some fresh lipstick on the tax code: lower the top rate from 35% to 28%, close loopholes, cut subsidies, and make offshore profit-shifting strategies more difficult. Then, in the same breath, he proposed new loopholes and subsidies—but for different constituencies, such as manufacturers.... Oh wait. Aren’t Boeing and GE manufacturers? But they’re already not paying taxes. So hand them even more tax benefits?

Why yes. GE CEO Jeffrey Immelt heads President Obama's Council on Jobs and Competitiveness. And taxpayer subsidies make GE more competitive. Same with Boeing. In that respect, the White House released a paper, Investing in America: Building an Economy That Lasts, intended for Immelt’s CEO colleagues not the Democratic rank and file. It outlines policies to make America competitive with low-wage countries like China and points at an accomplishment: dropping real wages in the US. For that whole debacle, read.... When The White House Touts Falling Wages.

On the Republican side, there has been a garden variety of tax-cut proposals, the latest from Mitt Romney. They also address some of the symptoms of what’s wrong with the tax code. But none address its most fundamental flaw. A flaw that produces the absurdity where some highly profitable companies pay no taxes while others pay them out their nose: diametrically opposed accounting systems for reporting to investors and to the IRS.

GAAP, our glorious body of accounting principles, allows companies in a myriad ways to inflate profits and incentivizes them to engage in economically unproductive activities to make their numbers look better. Goal: maximize reported income.

The corporate tax code does the opposite. It encourages the very same companies that reported inflated incomes to their investors to report little or no income to the IRS. It incentivizes companies to invest in economically unproductive activities, such as lobbying or shifting income offshore. Goal: minimize taxable income.

Rather than dinking with percentages and loopholes in the corporate tax code, Congress needs to throw it out and replace it with GAAP. Tax accounting and financial accounting would become the same. This would have highly beneficial consequences. Among them:

- Tax rates could be much lower because the income they’re applied to is the same inflated income that investors get dished up on a quarterly basis. Rates could be low enough to incentivize companies to keep profits onshore.
- Companies could choose: inflate profits to look good to investors but pay more in taxes; or report conservative numbers and pay less in taxes. Unintended consequence: financial reporting might become more reliable.
- Companies would have some certainty about income taxes and could commit to long-term investments with less risk.
- IRS auditors would do tax audits based on GAAP.

So if Boeing reported $5.1 billion in profit to its investors, as it did for 2011, it wouldn’t get a tax benefit of $635 million, as it did, but would instead pay income taxes at a low rate on the $5.1 billion. And companies that are now paying taxes at extravagant rates would pay less. It would bring a measure of fairness to corporate taxes.
Alas, that ugly corporate tax code is the congressional bread and butter—a tool with which lawmakers extract campaign contributions and other goodies from their corporate sponsors. And that will never change. For the astonishing debacle of their approval ratings, which are trending toward, well, zero, read.... The Most Disparaged Profession.

Profitable tax dodgers would dig in their heels. Companies that would see their tax bills fall might jump into the fray in support. Lobbyists on both sides would raise a ruckus. The noise level would blow out our national eardrums. Even President Obama, the populist yes-we-can campaigner, is financially dependent on the corporate elite and has to please them. With that in mind, he came to San Francisco for some epic fundraisers. For that astounding display of whom he is beholden to, read.... That Giant Sucking Sound in California
 

Minor Axis

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This is the welfare that goes unaddressed in this country. The few in the bottom 20% who abuse the welfare system get all the attention while the perpetrators of even greater welfare abuses skate on by....

So who was it who said Republicans were against welfare? And yes the Democrats have their hands dirty too. :(
These kind of articles make me loose hope, seriously.

Even if Accountable got his Ron Paul voted into office, (the Libertarian in Republican clothes), a so-called fiscal conservative, how much do you think would change? How does Ron feel about about Corporate welfare- Accountable?
 
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Accountable

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How does Ron feel about about Corporate welfare- Accountable?
Well, Minor, when I have such questions, I perform a complex ritual:
  1. I go to Google
  2. I type in "ron paul corporate welfare"
    1. Okay, to be fair, I typed in "ron paul cor" and the rest popped up as part of a list of suggestions
  3. I click on the various links
:D (Gotcha, buddy.)​


The first link was by Washington Post, which gave him three pinnochios. Several of the others are RP ads. It looks like the balance goes against corporate welfare. The more telling evidence would be a comparison of how much money the corporate welfare recipients give to the various candidates. GE absolutely owns Obama, but I don't know about the rest. I would love to know how much of their budget is devoted to lobbying, campaign contributions, political junkets, etc.
 

CityGirl

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. I would love to know how much of their budget is devoted to lobbying, campaign contributions, political junkets, etc.

According to OpenSecrets.Org, in 2011, GE spent $26,340,000 in lobbying.

Top Recipients, 2011-2012
CandidateAmount
Romney, Mitt (R)red.gif $37,750
Obama, Barack (D)blue.gif $30,493
Berman, Howard L (D-CA)blue.gif $21,860
Brown, Scott (R-MA)red.gif $20,400
Whitehouse, Sheldon (D-RI)blue.gif $11,415
...view more Recipients http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000125&lname=General+Electric
 

Minor Axis

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We have to recognize that money is what corrupts us, the thrill of self enrichment makes the world go around. It's all about give and take, giving welfare to forces that create wealth, even if it is focused wealth, if we take welfare from the slugs to make up for it...
 
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