Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) drops a bomb on
corporations who are dodging taxes by hiding money overseas by
introducing new legislation that will force tax dodgers to pay their
fair share.
Here is part of what The Corporate Tax Dodging Prevention Act of 2015 would do:
1. Ending the rule allowing American corporations to defer paying federal income taxes on profits of their offshore subsidiaries. (Section 2 of the bill.)
1. Ending the rule allowing American corporations to defer paying federal income taxes on profits of their offshore subsidiaries. (Section 2 of the bill.)
Current law allows American corporations to defer
paying U.S. income taxes on profits of their offshore subsidiaries until
those profits are “repatriated” (officially brought to the U.S.) which
may not happen for years, if ever. As a result, American corporations
would rather report foreign profits than domestic profits to the I.R.S.
Deferral therefore creates an incentive to either move operations and
jobs to a lower-tax country, or to use accounting gimmicks to make U.S.
profits appear to be earned in a lower-tax country.
The Congressional Research Service has indicated
that the cost of this tax avoidance to the U.S. Treasury approaches or
exceeds $100 billion annually. The Corporate Tax Dodging Prevention Act
would end this tax avoidance by ending the rule allowing deferral of
U.S. income taxes on offshore profits.
Under this legislation, American corporations would
still be allowed a credit that reduces their federal income tax
liability by an amount equal to income taxes paid to foreign governments
on these profits. This foreign tax credit exists under current law and
already prevents double-taxation of profits.
2. Closing loopholes allowing American corporations
to artificially inflate or accelerate their foreign tax credits.
(Section 4 of the bill.)
When U.S. corporations earn profits overseas, taxes
paid to the foreign country are credited against U.S. tax liabilities,
in order to avoid double-taxation. Under current rules and tax planning
strategies, corporations are allowed to claim foreign tax credits for
taxes paid on foreign income that is not subject to current U.S. tax
(meaning foreign tax credits in excess of what is needed to avoid
double-taxation). As a result, companies are able to use such credits to
pay less tax on their U.S. taxable income than they would if it was all
from U.S. sources – providing them with a competitive advantage over
companies that invest in the United States. Under the Corporate Tax
Dodging Prevention Act, foreign tax credits generated by profits earned
in one country could not be used against U.S. income taxes on profits
earned in another country.
3. Preventing American corporations from
claiming to be foreign by using a tax haven post office box as their
address. (Section 5 of the bill.)
At a news conference to unveil the legislation, Sen.
Sanders said, “”At a time when we have a $18.2 trillion national debt
and an unsustainable federal deficit; at a time when many of the largest
corporations in America are paying no federal income taxes; and at a
time when corporate profits are at an all-time high, it is past time for
corporate America to pay their fair share in taxes so that we can
create the millions of jobs this country needs.”
The House companion measure to The Corporate Tax
Dodging Prevention Act of 2015 is being introduced by Rep. Jan
Schakowsky (D-IL), who said, “Over the past 30-40 years, virtually every
time Americans have been asked to make ‘tough choices,’ it has resulted
in disproportionate harm to low- and middle-income individuals and
families. Cuts to programs that help Americans get ahead and stay ahead
have been significant, while tax breaks have been handed out like candy
to captains of industry and the behemoth corporations they run. Most
perversely, these tax breaks have incentivized moving revenue and jobs
overseas. It’s time that we end that skewed system, and the Stop
Corporate Tax Dodging Act would help us do that.”
There is a mounting wave of outrage building against
corporations who are dodging their taxes by hiding profits overseas.
There is a consensus on the left and right that this money needs to be
brought back home. The problem is that many Republicans don’t believe
that corporations should have to pay their fair share. In fact, the
Republican budgets passed by both the House and Senate include big tax
breaks for the wealthy and corporations.
As millions of hard working Americans and small
businesses file their tax returns, it is important to remember all of
the big and extremely profitable corporations who are forcing you to pay
more while they pay nothing, or even get a rebate.
The
issue is one of fairness. Those who make their money off of American
consumers should be paying their share of taxes. The era of the free
ride must come to an end for greedy corporate deadbeats, and Bernie
Sanders is proposing the legislation that will accomplish this goal.
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