Chattanooga Times Free Press

AN END TO CORPORATE TAX LOOPHOLES

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President Donald Trump and Congress will soon take up the job of reforming the tax code, with particular attention to corporate taxes. Since a substantia­l portion of the corporate income tax is paid by wealthy shareholde­rs, many of us are concerned that “reform” actually means reducing the tax burden for the 1 percent — and leaving a larger burden for the rest of us.

But the need for true reform is real. Although the corporate tax rate is 35 percent, companies generally pay around 23 percent. Giant loopholes save companies money, deprive the government of money, and create money for people in the tax avoidance industry.

Exotic schemes to game the system are constantly in the news.

Take, for example, the corporate inversion strategy, in which a U.S. company arranges to be taken over by a foreign company in order to eliminate its liability on overseas profits. These takeovers generate large fees for the accountant­s and lawyers who engineer the process without improving the broader economy.

“Dead peasant” insurance policies, made famous by the documentar­ian Michael Moore, are another example. In that scheme, huge companies like Wal-Mart take out insurance policies on their front line workers, such as checkout clerks, to smooth out their profit flows and reduce their tax liability. If a worker dies, the company gets the payout, not the individual or his family. Someone undoubtedl­y got very rich dreaming up dead peasant policies but this financial innovation does not contribute to economic growth.

Perhaps the greatest scheme of all is the private equity industry, which loads firms with debt. Because the interest on that debt is tax deductible, private equity firms can make large profits even if they’ve done nothing to improve a company’s performanc­e. Incidental­ly, many of the richest people in the country made their fortune in private equity, including folks like Mitt Romney, Pete Peterson and many other prominent billionair­es or near-billionair­es.

If the tax reformers are serious, here’s one simple way to largely eliminate the gaming opportunit­ies that have made these people rich.

Instead of traditiona­l taxes, the government could require corporatio­ns to turn over a portion of their stock, say 25 percent, in the form of non-voting shares. The government would benefit from any dividends or share buybacks but would have no voice in running the company.

This system would eliminate almost all opportunit­ies for gaming since a company would not be able to deny the government its share of profits unless it also withheld profits from its other shareholde­rs. And we would not call that “tax avoidance” but outright theft — the sort of thing that gets people sent to jail.

Many companies might actually embrace this system. They would save a huge amount of money on accounting and bookkeepin­g, and they wouldn’t have to take the tax code into considerat­ion when they decided their accounting procedures for long-term investment­s. They could simply do what makes the most sense for them.

Don’t bet on the Republican­s looking in this direction — the potential losers from these reforms, after all, are probably rich people who vote Republican. It is likely that they have more interest in reducing the taxes corporatio­ns owe than in reducing waste and increasing economic growth. But the rest of us should have a clear idea of what is at stake. The corporate tax code is badly in need of reform and there are ways to make it better.

Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research and the author of “Rigged: How Globalizat­ion and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer.”

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Dean Baker

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