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Overnight Open Thread

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lawhawk2/08/2011 8:38:30 am PST

re: #153 blueraven

GE is known to have the best tax department in the world, and they know how to beat tax departments and the IRS at their own game since they know the law better than the IRS and state tax departments. They take advantage of every conceivable credit, exemption, and deduction to reduce the company’s tax obligations, but there are companies that do even better because of the industry they’re in. Biotech companies can reduce their tax obligations to virtually nothing, but old-line companies can’t do nearly as much because of the existing tax code, which is filled with so many distortions that business decisions are made with an eye to the tax code rather than whether it would be a sound business practice.

Arguably, the United States now has a corporate tax code that’s the worst of all worlds. The official rate is higher than in almost any other country, which forces companies to devote enormous time and effort to finding loopholes. Yet the government raises less money in corporate taxes than it once did, because of all the loopholes that have been added in recent decades.

“A dirty little secret,” Richard Clarida, a Columbia University economist and former official in the Treasury Department under President George W. Bush, has said, “is that the corporate income tax used to raise a fair amount of revenue.”

Over the last five years, on the other hand, Boeing paid a total tax rate of just 4.5 percent, according to Capital IQ. Southwest Airlines paid 6.3 percent. And the list goes on: Yahoo paid 7 percent; Prudential Financial, 7.6 percent; General Electric, 14.3 percent.

Economists have long pleaded for an overhaul of the corporate tax code, and both President Obama and Republicans now say they favor one, too. But it won’t be easy. Companies that use loopholes to avoid taxes don’t mind the current system, of course, and they have more than a few lobbyists at their disposal.

The official position of the Business Roundtable, one of the most important corporate lobbying groups, is telling. The Roundtable says it supports corporate tax reform. But it actually favors only a reduction in the tax rate. The group refuses to say whether it also favors a reduction of loopholes. In effect, the Roundtable wants a tax cut for its members regardless of how much the tax code is simplified — or whether the budget deficit grows.