The Jerusalem Post

Companies cheer Trump tax cuts, but jobs are less certain to follow

- • By DAVID SHEPARDSON and DIANE BARTZ

US businesses will reap a windfall if President Donald Trump’s plan to cut corporate tax rates and slash taxes on cash parked overseas becomes law. But it is unclear whether they will stimulate a surge in investment and job creation in return.

Under Trump’s proposals, American companies would move from being the most highly taxed among the Group of 20 countries to among the lowest. Tax rates would fall below those of neighborin­g Mexico and Canada, which Trump has accused of shortchang­ing the United States in trade deals.

Corporate leaders and business lobbying groups, such as the US Chamber of Commerce, on Wednesday cheered the administra­tion’s tax proposals, adding that the initial one-page plan left out crucial details.

The tax plan, which includes a cut in taxes on public companies to 15% from 35%, does not detail cuts in spending that would help keep the budget deficit under control.

AT&T Corp. chief executive Randall Stephenson welcomed the tax plan but cautioned that “the practical reality of getting to 15% is you have to get yourself reconciled to some level of deficits for a period of time as you get the economic stimulatio­n.”

Big US companies have nearly $1.8 trillion in cash stockpiled overseas, according to Moody’s Investors Service. Technology powerhouse Apple Inc. has more than $200 billion of that total.

Apple did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Wednesday, but chief executive officer Tim Cook has said the company was looking to bring back offshore cash if tax rates for doing so were lower.

“What we would do with it, let’s wait and see exactly what it is, but as I’ve said before, we are always looking at acquisitio­ns,” he told investors on the company’s first-quarter earnings call in January in response to an analyst’s question about the company’s thinking on acquisitio­ns.

Cook’s comment points to a big unknown for the White House and congressio­nal Republican­s, who have said business tax cuts would result in more and better jobs.

Studies of the results of past tax holidays found that most of the offshore cash brought home by US companies was used to buy back shares or make acquisitio­ns – not to fund investment­s in production capacity or jobs.

Under pressure from shareholde­rs, listed companies have set high targets for return on invested capital. General Motors Co., for example, has told investors it is aiming for 20% returns on its capital investment­s.

Many US companies have been tightfiste­d about investing in new plants and equipment following the last recession, which left them wary of becoming overextend­ed. Since 2014, investment in new equipment has flat-lined, according to government data.

A MIXED BAG

The financial impact of the White House tax plan will vary widely by company and business sector. A proposal to cut inheritanc­e taxes, for example, is of high interest to auto dealers, which are often family-controlled enterprise­s.

Many companies already pay less than the headline 35% tax rate. Companies in the S&P 500 index paid an average tax rate of 29.06% for 2016, Standard and Poors said.

A change of a few percentage points in tax rates can make a big difference. Aircraft maker Boeing Co. on Wednesday reported a 19% increase in first-quarter profits, partly because of a 4-percentage-point drop in its tax rate.

“At the highest level we’re a big supporter of tax reform,” Boeing chief financial officer Greg Smith told analysts and journalist­s on a call Wednesday. “It’s going to drive jobs, it’s going to drive the US economy broadly speaking, and it’s going to allow us to compete.”

Boeing has been cutting jobs in the United States, warning employees last week that it planned another round of cuts that would eliminate hundreds of engineerin­g jobs.

While the tax cuts may produce a short-term boost to the economy and add fuel to a stock-market rally, it falls short of the comprehens­ive tax reform that Trump had pledged earlier.

Regarding other parts of his agenda, his administra­tion has been stymied in its attempts to limit immigratio­n by the courts, while an attempt to repeal and replace Obamacare failed in Congress.

“A cynic would say this is a rushed attempt to have something big to show for President Trump’s first 100 days in office,” said Luke Bartholome­w, an investment strategist at Aberdeen Asset Management in London.

 ?? (Carlos Barria/Reuters) ?? A REPORTER takes a picture of a White House press release on its tax-reform plan during the daily briefing at the White House in Washington on Wednesday.
(Carlos Barria/Reuters) A REPORTER takes a picture of a White House press release on its tax-reform plan during the daily briefing at the White House in Washington on Wednesday.

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