The Commercial Appeal

Panel sees framework for taxing offshore profit

- By Richard Rubin

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers are starting to see the outlines of a bipartisan agreement on how to tax the income that U.S.-based corporatio­ns earn outside the country.

Such a system would make it easier for U. S. companies to bring home foreign income that has been taxed elsewhere while preventing profits booked in low-tax or notax jurisdicti­ons from receiving the same benefit.

A deadlock-breaking agreement would respond to companies including Procter & Gamble and General Electric that have lobbied for change and complain that the U.S. tax code hurts their ability to compete globally. Under the current system, fewer than 100 companies have stockpiled more than $1.2 trillion in untaxed profits outside the U.S.

“There has been a lot of thinking and work done on these issues over the last couple of years, and I do think that has brought the parties closer together,” said Michael Mundaca, who was a senior Treasury Department tax official in the administra­tions of Presidents George W. Bush and Obama.

The potential framework is conceptual, not the product of negotiatio­ns or the detailed bill-writing that would need to occur. An agreement on internatio­nal taxation would probably happen only as part of a broader rewrite of the tax code. That is months if not years away and locked in a partisan dispute over how much revenue the government should collect.

Jacob Lew, the next Treasury secretary, told senators during his conf irmation process that he saw the potential for agreement on internatio­nal taxation.

“There is considerab­le debate as to how to reform the internatio­nal tax system,” Lew wrote in response to a question from Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch, the panel’s top Republican. “But I believe that there is common ground on this subject, including a mutual concern about preserving the U. S. tax base by reducing incentives that encourage the shifting of investment and income overseas.”

Senate Finance Committee members Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Ron Wyden, D-Ore., both said in interviews this week that they see room for a potential compromise.

Through meetings with Lew, who earlier served as White House chief of staff and head of the Office of Management and Budget, and his predecesso­r at Treasury, Timothy Geithner, Portman said he has seen more acceptance by the Obama administra­tion of the current system’s disadvanta­ges for U. S. companies. Portman said lawmakers could agree on a system that exempts foreign income along with rules that prevent companies from shifting profits outside the U.S.

“You can do that,” he said. “Other countries have done it, so I think there’s a growing consensus around this.”

The debate is between what tax analysts call worldwide tax systems and territoria­l tax systems.

The U.S. system is nominally worldwide, meaning that companies with U.S. headquarte­rs owe taxes on all of the income they earn around the world. They can receive credits for taxes paid to foreign government­s and can defer U.S. taxation until they bring the money home.

That system gives U.S. companies an incentive to shift profits outside the country and park them there, a trend that has accelerate­d as companies expand their markets overseas.

“We believe the U. S. tax system needs to be reformed to close loopholes, to lower the corporate rate and to provide a territoria­l system like virtually all other major industrial­ized countries,” GE spokesman Seth Martin said in a statement. “American companies need to be able to compete on a level playing field with their foreign competitor­s.”

GE has $108 billion outside the U.S., the most of any U.S.- based company, according to its Feb. 26 regulatory filing. Companies are required to disclose their untaxed profits annually.

The cash buildup has created pressure on companies such as Apple Inc. and Cisco Systems Inc. to seek legislativ­e changes or find more productive uses for the money. They have failed to persuade Congress to repeat a 2004 tax holiday on offshore profits.

Cisco, which had $41.3 billion in untaxed profits outside the U.S. as of July 28, 2012, will continue making investment­s in Canada and other countries, said John Chambers, the company’s chairman and chief executive officer.

“We are assuming that we’re not going to get much help from Washington,” he said on Bloomberg Television Feb. 14. “We just ask them not to hurt us too much, and we’re going to go ahead and put our money to use based upon tax policy.”

In comparison with the U.S., most other industrial­ized countries operate under a so-called territoria­l system, which exempts all or almost all foreign income from home-country taxation. Britain and Japan have switched to such systems in the past few years.

Judging by the rhetoric, the gap between the administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s on this issue remains wide.

Obama campaigned twice on curbing tax breaks that he says encourage U.S. companies to ship jobs overseas, signaling his intent to preserve the worldwide system. Each of his proposed annual budgets has called for limits on companies’ ability to defer U.S. taxation.

Other Democrats, such as Michigan Sen. Carl Levin, have proposed even tougher limits.

What’s changed in the past few months is the administra­tion’s engagement with business groups and Republican­s’ insistence on measures to prevent companies from shifting profits outside the U.S.

The administra­tion’s statements have expressed its opposition to a “pure territoria­l system,” allowing Obama to stake out a position without actually criticizin­g the Republican congressio­nal proposals.

Drafts from Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., and Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., include rules to limit companies’ ability to book their U.S. profits in low-tax jurisdicti­ons to benefit from the territoria­l system.

The administra­tion has been helpful because it “has not put any lines in the sand with respect to anything that has been proposed so far,” said Mundaca, who left Treasury in 2011 and is now a co-leader of national tax at Ernst & Young LLP in Washington.

One of Camp’s options is a form of the global minimum tax that the administra­tion has suggested. Another option would apply only to income earned from intangible­s such as patents, providing incentives for locating them in the U.S. and penalties for holding them in low-tax countries.

Those approaches are compatible with Obama’s goals of limiting profitshif­ting and encouragin­g investment in the U. S., Mundaca said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States