Los Angeles Times

Apple defends tax setup amid reports

Paradise Papers reveal multinatio­nals’ tactics as GOP aims for corporate rate cut.

- By Don Lee don.lee@latimes.com Twitter: @dleelatime­s

WASHINGTON — For years, Apple and other multinatio­nal firms have faced inquiries from government authoritie­s about tactics they employed to lower their tax bills.

Now, new published reports show just how some of these global corporatio­ns tapped elite tax specialist­s to devise clever strategies, including island havens and secretive shell companies, to avoid paying billions of dollars into government coffers.

The disclosure­s contained in the so-called Paradise Papers — documents and corporate records primarily from Bermuda-based law firm Appleby — immediatel­y added fuel to the debate over the GOP’s tax proposal released last week, which includes slashing the corporate tax rate to 20% from 35%.

“We are all bearing witness to the consequenc­es of Congress’ failure to address offshore tax haven abuse,” said Gawain Kripke, policy director for Oxfam America. “Yet congressio­nal leaders are charging forward with a tax bill which has as its primary feature a massive windfall for offshore tax dodgers.”

The internatio­nal antipovert­y organizati­on called for an immediate pause on the Republican tax bill and an investigat­ion into the activities revealed by the Paradise Papers.

Apple, in response to reports based on the documents, on Monday defended its tax payments, saying that the maker of iPhones is the largest taxpayer in the world and that the company “pays every dollar it owes in every country around the world.”

While critics have decried the Republican tax bill as a corporate handout, others argue that a tax overhaul is needed precisely because of the current system. They say the 35% tax rate leaves U.S. companies at a disadvanta­ge against foreign rivals and motivates corporatio­ns to set up complex tax structures to reduce their tax burden, as well as to stash internatio­nal profits abroad.

American businesses have long complained that the U.S. corporate tax rate is the highest among advanced economies, but the reality is that many American multinatio­nals pay a much smaller percentage. The tax code is rife with many exemptions and special provisions, and tax lawyers and advisors have come up with creative methods to exploit loopholes in the system.

The result is that more than $100 billion in corporate tax revenue is lost annually by the U.S. government, according to analysts’ estimates. And while the American statutory corporate tax rate is among the highest, total U.S. corporate taxes collected, as a percentage of the economy, is about average for developed countries.

The House GOP tax plan would allow multinatio­nal companies to bring home an estimated $2.6 trillion parked in offshore entities at a rate of 12% or lower. Even so, tax policy experts doubt that the tax proposal would discourage U.S. firms from going abroad or reduce their penchant for devising tax shelters.

“I don’t think the tax overhaul is going to really address the flaws in our internatio­nal tax rules,” said Eric Toder, co-director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center at the Urban Institute. “With a 20% [corporate tax] rate, I suppose that decreases the incentive to stash money overseas. On the other hand, you still want to get the rate down to zero if you can.”

Few companies are perceived to be as aggressive — and successful — in pushing down corporate taxes as Apple, making it a target of government investigat­ions in the U.S. and Europe. One focus in recent years was how Apple had booked its massive earnings, much of it intellectu­al property generated in the U.S., to offshore tax shelters in Ireland.

A Senate subcommitt­ee in May 2013 claimed Apple had used various methods to avoid paying federal taxes on $44 billion of earnings from 2009 to 2012. Apple’s chief, Tim Cook, said at the Senate hearing then that the maker of iPhones pays “every single dollar” of taxes that it owes.

But not long after that Senate testimony, Apple sought a new strategy and, with the help of the legaland tax-advisory firm Appleby, eventually found a new tax haven on a tiny island in the English Channel called Jersey, according to published reports based on the Paradise Papers.

These leaked records, originally obtained by a German newspaper, have been shared with the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, which is made up of media organizati­ons such as the New York Times, the Guardian in Britain and CBC in Canada. The Los Angeles Times is not a media partner.

In its statement Monday, Apple contended that there were a number of inaccuraci­es in the reports by the consortium.

“The changes Apple made to its corporate structure in 2015 were specially designed to preserve its tax payments to the United States, not to reduce its taxes anywhere else,” the company said. No operations or investment­s were moved from Ireland, said Apple, which noted that its effective tax rate on foreign earnings is 21%.

In addition to details of Apple’s tax-restructur­ing strategy, the Paradise Papers included informatio­n about the use of shell companies and other tax-reducing strategies by corporatio­ns such as Nike, Uber, Facebook and Allergan, as well as individual­s.

Last year, the Obama administra­tion sought to crack down on companies moving headquarte­rs overseas, socalled corporate inversions, to avoid paying U.S. taxes. Officials also sought to curb another tax-avoidance practice in which multinatio­nal firms make loans or shift finances between affiliates to strip out earnings in highertax countries or take advantage of tax breaks such as interest deductions.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? “CHANGES Apple made to its corporate structure in 2015 were specially designed to preserve its tax payments to the [U.S.],” it said. Above, CEO Tim Cook.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images “CHANGES Apple made to its corporate structure in 2015 were specially designed to preserve its tax payments to the [U.S.],” it said. Above, CEO Tim Cook.

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