Go offshore young man and avoid
paying taxes. Plunder at will in those foreign lands, and if you get in
trouble, Uncle Sam will come rushing to your assistance, diplomatically,
financially and militarily, even if you have managed to avoid paying
for those government services. Just pretend you’re a multinational
corporation.
That’s the honest instruction for business
success provided by 60 of the largest U.S. corporations that, according
to a Wall Street Journal analysis, “parked a total of $166 billion
offshore last year” shielding more than 40 percent of their profits from
U.S. taxes. They all do it, including Microsoft, GE and pharmaceutical
giant Abbott Laboratories. Many, like GE, are so good at it that they
have avoided taxes altogether in some recent years.
But they all still expect Uncle Sam to come
to their aid with military firepower in case the natives abroad get
restless and nationalize their company’s assets. We still have a
blockade against Cuba because Fidel Castro more than a half century ago
dared seize an American-owned telephone company. During that same
period, we have consistently intervened to maintain the lock of U.S.
corporations on the world’s resources, continuing to the present task of
making Iraq and Libya safe for our oil companies.
America’s multinational corporations still
need the Navy to protect shipping lanes and the Commerce Department to
safeguard U.S. copyrights. They also expect the Federal Reserve and
Treasury Department to intervene to provide bailouts and cheap money
when the corporate financial swindlers get into trouble, like GE, which
almost went aground when its GE Capital financial wing got caught in the
great banking meltdown.
They want a huge U.S. government to finance
scientific breakthroughs, educate the future workforce, sustain the
infrastructure and provide for law and order on the home front, but they
just don’t feel they should have to pay for a system of governance,
even though it primarily serves their corporate interests. The U.S.
government exists primarily to make the world safe for multinational
corporations, but those firms feel no obligation to pay for that
protection in return.
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The most skilled at this con game are the
health care and technology companies, which, as a Senate investigation
last year revealed, have become quite expert at shifting marketing
rights and patents offshore to low-tax countries. Microsoft boosted its
foreign holdings by $16 billion last year, and by the end of the
company’s fiscal year on June 30, 2012, had $60.8 billion stashed
internationally. Through creative accounting, Microsoft was able to
claim that only 7 percent of its pretax profit last year was
domestically generated.
Oracle increased its foreign holdings by
one-third, including new subsidiaries in low-tax Ireland, and thereby
was able to add a cool $272 million to the company’s bottom line by
avoiding U.S. taxes. Abbott estimates that it saved $1.6 billion in U.S.
taxes through its operations in more than a dozen countries. By moving
$8.1 billion of its profits overseas, Abbott was able to claim a pretax
loss on its U.S. operations. Johnson & Johnson, another health
industry giant, has almost all of its cash—$14.8 billion out of $14.9
billion—abroad, yet still claims to be a U.S. company.
One of the longtime leaders in offshore tax
avoidance has been that once-American-as-apple-pie company GE, which in
a more innocent time hired Ronald Reagan to advertise its wares. Now GE
has nearly two-thirds of its jobs abroad, avoided U.S. taxes in the
previous two years and has $108 billion stashed overseas.
Two years ago, President Obama appointed GE
CEO Jeffrey Immelt to chair his Jobs Council, despite the fact that
Immelt had cut his company’s U.S. workforce by a fifth. GE’s expertise
is no longer in appliance manufacturing, a division Immelt has tried to
shed, but rather in financial manipulation.
GE Capital was a leader in the financial
scams that still haunt the U.S. economy, and Immelt has been most
effective in lobbying Washington politicians to rig the tax laws to
benefit his and other multinational corporations. He has created some
jobs, but unfortunately, they are abroad, along with his company’s
untaxed profits.
For all these multinational corporations, the love of profit trumps loyalty to country.
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