$2.1 Trillion in Corporate Profits Held Offshore: A Comparison of International Tax Proposals

July 14, 2015 02:18 PM | | Bookmark and Share

Read the report as a PDF.

The U.S. system of taxing multinational corporations’ earnings encourages companies to direct more investment abroad, either in reality or on paper.  The fact that the earnings of the foreign subsidiaries of U.S. corporations are not taxed until they are officially transferred to the domestic parent company leads to an incentive to “permanently reinvest” funds in low-tax jurisdictions and indefinitely defer paying U.S. taxes.  This incentive has resulted in multinationals parking huge sums of profits in tax havens (such as Luxembourg, Bermuda, and the Cayman Islands).  This report explains and compares several proposals to address this issue, including a repatriation holiday, deemed repatriation, and ending the deferral of taxes on U.S. multinational corporations’ foreign earnings.

Current Deferral System Encourages Use of Tax Havens

U.S. multinational corporations’ offshore cash holdings nearly doubled between 2008 and 2013 to more than $2.1 trillion.[1] Why is such a huge sum held abroad and designated as “permanently reinvested”? The answer has to do with the way the U.S. corporate income tax system treats the earnings of foreign subsidiaries of U.S. multinational corporations. In a residential (or worldwide) tax system, residents are taxed on their worldwide income, regardless of the source. At the other end of the spectrum is a territorial tax system, in which corporate income taxes are only collected on income earned within the country. The U.S. has a hybrid of these two systems — taxes are collected both on income earned domestically and, in theory, the income corporations earn abroad. However, corporations can defer paying taxes on foreign income until they “repatriate” foreign profits (i.e., paid to the U.S. parent company as dividends). Additionally, the U.S. tax system provides a foreign tax credit on repatriated income, which is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in U.S. tax liability to offset any taxes paid to foreign governments (limited to the total U.S. tax that would be due in cases where the foreign tax rate is higher than the U.S. rate).

This deferral system creates a tax incentive for multinational corporations to increase the share of earnings they book abroad (at least on paper). While corporations may legitimately earn some of these profits via foreign subsidiaries, this system also encourages companies to disguise profits earned in the U.S. as foreign profits for the sole purpose of avoiding U.S. taxes. Further, corporations hold a large portion of profits in tax havens, so many pay little to nothing in foreign taxes. IRS data showed that 54 percent of multinationals’ reported foreign earnings in 2010 were in 12 jurisdictions widely considered to be tax havens.[2] CTJ’s 2014 Offshore Shell Games report found that 362 Fortune 500 companies (72 percent) had at least 7,827 subsidiaries in offshore tax havens as of 2013.[3] Multinationals are avoiding an estimated $90 billion or more in U.S. taxes each year by booking profits in tax havens.[4]

International Tax Reform Should Tax Existing Offshore Profits and Discourage Further Offshoring

In the past several years, proposals for a “repatriation holiday” or a “deemed repatriation” have become increasingly popular among lawmakers. Under a repatriation holiday, corporations can voluntarily repatriate foreign earnings for a limited time at a sharply reduced tax rate. Proponents tout proposals for a repatriation holiday as a way to encourage U.S. multinationals to bring home some of the $2.1 trillion that the U.S. government has not taxed. A deemed repatriation would treat all accumulated foreign earnings as repatriated, regardless of whether they are actually brought back to the United States, but would also tax them at a lower rate than the 35 percent statutory corporate rate. While both of these proposals would lead to a short-run increase in revenue by collecting taxes on those offshore profits that are currently deferred, the reduced rates would result in decreased revenue in the longer run, in part by encouraging corporations to move even more of their earnings offshore. Instead of rewarding corporations for dodging U.S. taxes, lawmakers should end the system of deferral that encourages them to do so, while taxing their offshore profits at the full 35 percent rate (while still allowing for a foreign tax credit).

A COMPARISON OF THREE TYPES OF REPATRIATION PROPOSALS

 

Existing Offshore Earnings

Future Offshore Earnings

Repatriation Holiday

Earnings that are voluntarily repatriated would be taxed at a reduced rate

Tax would continue to be deferred until repatriated. The incentive to increase permanently reinvested earnings would be even larger as corporations anticipate future repatriation holidays.

Deemed Repatriation

One-time tax would be levied on all permanently reinvested earnings. Current proposals would tax earnings at a reduced rate

Tax would continue to be deferred until repatriated. If deemed repatriation is enacted as a transition tax, the taxation of future earnings would depend on the specifics of the reform.

Ending Deferral

Would probably tax existing earnings over a period of time, possibly at a reduced tax rate.

Would tax all offshore earnings, regardless of whether they are repatriated.

 

Repatriation Tax Proposals Background

Under a repatriation holiday, companies are not required to repatriate their foreign profits but may do so to take advantage of the low tax rate. Lawmakers first conceived of repatriation holidays as tools for economic stimulus under the assumption that they would give companies an incentive to use profits that were “trapped” offshore to increase domestic investment, spurring job creation. This was the rationale for a repatriation holiday enacted in 2004 as part of the American Jobs Creation Act (P.L. 108-357), which, for a limited time, allowed corporations to repatriate their offshore earnings at a rate of 5.25 percent (in contrast to the 35 percent statutory corporate rate). Members of Congress put forth proposals for a repeat of a similar repatriation holiday during the Great Recession and subsequent recovery, but they never passed. More recently, lawmakers have proposed repatriation holidays to replenish the Highway Trust Fund.

In contrast to a repatriation holiday, a deemed repatriation would require multinationals to pay a tax on their previously untaxed offshore earnings, regardless of whether they are actually repatriated. While deemed repatriation could tax these earnings at the full corporate rate, the recent proposals all provide for a reduced rate. Most of these proposals have been part of broader corporate tax overhaul proposals, and the tax collected on accumulated offshore earnings would be considered a “transition tax” as the U.S. moves to a new tax regime. The table in the appendix details the various repatriation tax proposals that have been put forth.

Problems with a Repatriation Holiday

Effectiveness

While some proposals for repatriation holidays are defended as economic stimuli (such as those by Rep. Kevin Brady and Sen. John McCain and Rep. Trent Franks), there is no evidence that they have this effect. A report by the Congressional Research Service found that the 2004 repatriation holiday did not lead to job creation or economic growth.[5] Instead, there is evidence that corporations distributed a large portion of repatriated profits to shareholders via higher dividends or stock repurchases or used the money to increase executive pay. Although the law intended to prohibit these uses of repatriated funds, corporations could use these funds for already budgeted expenses, freeing up cash for “prohibited” uses. Some of the newer proposals, including the Sen. Barbara Boxer/Sen. Rand Paul and Sen. Ron Wyden bills, include similar restrictions to the earlier repatriation holiday, but the fungibility of corporations’ funds would make them impossible to enforce. Those companies that benefitted the most from the 2004 repatriation were no more likely than other corporations to use the repatriated funds for growth-generating activities.[6] In fact, many of the companies that took advantage of the repatriation holiday actually reduced their domestic workforces in subsequent years.[7]

Additionally, claims that repatriation holidays will free up funds that would otherwise be “trapped” offshore are contradicted by findings that much or most of these funds are already invested in the U.S. economy. A study by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations surveying 27 corporations, including the 15 that repatriated the most funds during the 2004 repatriation holiday, found that at least 46 percent of their offshore “permanently reinvested” earnings were actually invested in U.S. assets like Treasury bonds, U.S. stocks, and U.S. bank deposits by the American corporations’ controlled foreign subsidiaries.[8] Multinationals are theoretically prohibited from using these funds to invest in their own U.S. operations, pay shareholder dividends, or repurchasing stock, but they can get around this by borrowing at low interest rates, using their foreign earnings as implied collateral.

Fiscal Issues

Another failure of repatriation holidays is that while they may increase revenue in the first few years, they result in a significant revenue loss in the long run, as profits are repatriated early, leaving less to be repatriated later, and as firms are encouraged to move even more profits abroad in anticipation of another tax holiday. A previous CTJ report found that the 20 corporations that repatriated the most offshore profits under the 2004 holiday nearly tripled the amount of their cash “permanently reinvested” offshore between 2005 and 2010, indicating that they are indeed hoping for another repatriation holiday to take advantage of the lower rates.[9] The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimated that the Boxer/Paul proposal, which is similar to the 2004 repatriation holiday but with a rate of 6.5 percent, would cost $118 billion in revenue over ten years.[10] Thus, proposals that would use revenues from repatriation to fund infrastructure improvements or save the Highway Trust Fund (see, for instance, the bills proposed by Rep. John Delaney and by Sens. Boxer and Paul) are simply gimmicks that raise money in the very short run but lose much more revenue thereafter.

Fairness Issues

Another big problem with repatriation holidays is that they reward corporations for aggressive tax avoidance. Corporations that have shifted profits into offshore tax havens have more to gain from repatriation holidays since they have paid little or no foreign taxes to offset their U.S. tax liability. These companies can also more easily move funds into tax havens compared to companies whose foreign investments are in things like buildings and equipment. One study found that the companies that repatriated under the 2004 holiday were on average larger and had lower effective foreign tax rates than those that did not repatriate, suggesting that the repatriating companies use foreign operations as tax-avoidance strategies.[11] IRS data show that three quarters of funds repatriated during the 2004 holiday had previously been held in tax haven jurisdictions.[12] Additionally, around half of the repatriations were by pharmaceutical and technological companies, who can more easily shift U.S. earnings offshore by transferring intellectual property such as patents and copyrights to their foreign subsidiaries.[13]

Problems with Deemed Repatriation

A deemed repatriation of accumulated offshore earnings can be viewed as either a tax increase or a tax cut in the context of the current international tax system, depending on whether those earnings would have ever been repatriated. Earnings that are actually permanently invested in operations abroad may never be repatriated, and since those earnings aren’t taxed under the deferral system, a deemed repatriation would result in a tax increase. However, because a significant portion of permanently reinvested earnings are not invested in actual operations and may eventually be repatriated at the full 35 percent rate, a deemed repatriation at a lower rate would represent a tax break on these earnings. Just as with a repatriation holiday, a low preferential rate may encourage corporations to shift more of their future earnings abroad in anticipation of another future deemed repatriation and would provide the greatest rewards to the most egregious tax dodgers. A CTJ analysis of President Obama’s proposal for a 14 percent transition tax identified 10 major corporations, each with at least $17 billion in “permanently reinvested” offshore profits, that would collectively owe $82 billion less in taxes than if the full 35 percent rate was applied.[14]

Another problem common to both deemed repatriation and repatriation holiday proposals is that they are short-sighted. A large portion of the revenues raised is likely to simply reflect the shifting forward of revenues that would have been received from foreign income repatriated in later years. The actual revenue implications of a deemed repatriation will depend on what portion of permanently reinvested earnings would have later been repatriated. JCT estimated that President Obama’s transition tax, which is payable over five years, would raise revenue in the first five years, but lose revenue in the next five years.[15] Therefore, proposals to fund the Highway Trust Fund with revenues from deemed repatriation (including the Obama, Delaney, and Camp plans) are only short-term solutions in contrast to a more sustainable solution, such as increasing the gasoline tax.[16]

One concern that has been raised about a deemed repatriation is that companies with investments in non-cash assets abroad (e.g. factories) may not have the liquidity to cover their U.S. tax liability. The tax reform proposal by the former Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp proposal attempted to address this issue by setting a lower rate on non-cash assets than on cash and other more liquid assets. However, it is likely that corporations with non-cash foreign investments (as opposed to those with liquid assets held in tax havens) are already paying significant foreign taxes and would have little or no U.S. tax liability under a deemed repatriation once foreign tax credits are taken into account. In the event that corporations do face liquidity challenges, most proposals mitigate this problem by allowing the tax to be paid over several years.

Ending Deferral of Tax on Foreign Earnings is a Better Long-Term Solution

If Congress wants to increase revenues and encourage domestic investment, it needs to minimize the incentive for U.S. multinationals to shift profits to tax havens in the first place. It could accomplish this by ending the policy of deferring taxes on foreign income. This would mean that corporations would pay the same rate on all income, whether it is earned at home or abroad (or earned in the U.S., but disguised as foreign earnings). Plus, the tax would be due as the income is earned, eliminating the potential for perpetual deferral. In the transition to a new system without deferral, the $2.1 trillion currently designated as permanently reinvested should also be taxed at the full corporate rate (adjusted for foreign tax credits) over a period of time. As momentum gathers around international tax reform, ending deferral is an option that needs to be on the table. It would succeed where repatriation holidays and deemed repatriations fail.

APPENDIX: RECENT REPATRIATION TAX PROPOSALS

Proposed Repatriation Measure

Voluntary or Mandatory

Part of Comprehensive Reform Proposal?

Proposed Maximum Rate

Notes

Obama 2016 Budget Proposal – Transition Tax

Mandatory

Yes

14%

  • JCT estimated tax would raise $217 billion over 10 years
  • Payable over 5 years
  • Revenues would go to transportation infrastructure

Senators Barbara Boxer and Rand Paul – Repatriation Holiday (Invest in Transportation Act, 2015)

Voluntary

No

6.5%

  • JCT estimated bill would cost $118 billion over 10 years in lost revenue
  • Revenues would be transferred to Highway Trust Fund

Rep. John Delaney – Deemed Repatriation (Infrastructure 2.0 Act, 2015)

Mandatory

Yes

8.75%

  • Estimated to raise $170 billion over 10 years
  • Revenues would go to replenish Highway Trust Fund and capitalize an American Infrastructure Fund

Rep. John Delaney – Repatriation Holiday (Partnership to Build America Act, 2015)

Voluntary

No

0%*

  • *While repatriated funds would technically be tax-free, corporations would only be allowed to repatriate a certain amount for each dollar of “qualified infrastructure bonds” they purchase, so the effective tax rate would vary

Rep. Dave Camp -Transition Tax (Tax Reform Act of 2014)

Mandatory

Yes

8.75%

  • JCT estimated that proposal would raise $170 billion over 10 years
  • 8.75% rate would apply to cash and other liquid assets, while a 3.5% rate would apply to non-liquid assets
  • Payable over 8 years

Sen. Max Baucus -Transition Tax (International Business Tax Reform Discussion Draft, 2013)

Mandatory

Yes

20%

  • Payable over 8 years

Sen. Ron Wyden -Transition Tax (Bipartisan Tax Fairness and Simplification Act of 2011)

Voluntary

Yes

5.25%

  • Tax would serve as a transition to a system that would end deferral of tax on foreign earnings

2004 Repatriation Holiday (American Jobs Creation Act of 2004)

Voluntary

No

5.25%

 


 


 

[1] Citizens for Tax Justice, Dozens of Companies Admit Using Tax Havens, April 1, 2015.

[2] Citizens for Tax Justice, American Corporations Report Over Half of Their Offshore Profits as Earned in 12 Tax Havens, May 28, 2014.

[3] Citizens for Tax Justice, Offshore Shell Games 2014, June 4, 2014.

[4] Kimberly A. Clausing, “The Revenue Effects of Multina­tional Firm Income Shifting,” Tax Notes, March 28, 2011, 1560-1566.

[5] Donald J. Marples and Jane G. Gravelle, Congressional Research Service, “Tax Cuts on Repatriation Earnings as Economic Stimulus: An Economic Analysis,” May 27, 2011. https://ctj.sfo2.digitaloceanspaces.com/pdf/crs_repatriationholiday.pdf

[6] Roy Clemons and Michael R. Kinney, “An Analysis of the Tax Holiday for Repatriation Under the Jobs Act,” Tax Analysts Special Report, October 20, 2008.

[7] See note 5.

[8] United States Senate, Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, “Offshore Funds Located Onshore: Majority Staff Report Addendum,” December 14, 2011. http://www.hsgac.senate.gov/download/report-addendum_-psi-majority-staff-report-offshore-funds-located-onshore

[9] Citizens for Tax Justice, Data on Top 20 Corporations Using Repatriation Amnesty Calls into Question Claims of New Democrat Network, August 26, 2011.

[10] Richard Rubin, “Repatriation Tax Break from Boxer, Paul Cost $118 Billion,” Bloomberg Business, April 30, 2015. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-04-30/repatriation-tax-break-from-paul-boxer-would-cost-118-billion

[11] See note 6.

[12] Americans for Tax Fairness, ”Repatriated Dividends from 12 Tax Havens Due to the 2004 Tax Holiday Legislation, 2004 — 2006.” http://www.americansfortaxfairness.org/files/Repatriated-Funds-from-Tax-Havens-2004-2006.pdf

[13] Chuck Marr and Chye-Ching Huang, Repatriation Tax Holiday Would Lose Revenue And Is a Proven Policy Failure, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, June 20, 2014. http://www.cbpp.org/research/repatriation-tax-holiday-would-lose-revenue-and-is-a-proven-policy-failure?fa=view&id=4154#_ftn14

[14] Citizens for Tax Justice, Ten Corporations Would Save $82 Billion in Taxes Under Obama’s Proposed 14% Transition Tax, February 3, 2015.

[15] Joint Committee on Taxation, “Estimated Budget Effects of the Revenue Provisions Contained in the President’s Fiscal Year 2016 Budget Proposal,” March 6, 2015. https://www.jct.gov/publications.html?func=startdown&id=4739

[16] Davis, Carl, Adding Sustainability to the Highway Trust Fund, Testimony for the House Committee on Ways and Means Hearing on Long-Term Financing of the Highway Trust Fund. Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, June 17, 2015.


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Jeb Bush Loves Tax Cuts, Especially for the Rich

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Of all the GOP presidential candidates, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush has been the most tightlipped on federal tax reform. So far, Bush has kept his vision vague, calling for a “vastly simpler system” and “clearing out special favors for the few, reducing rates for all.”

Just last week, he used the release of 30 years of his tax returns to call for lower tax rates. Tax analysts on both sides of the aisle have said his higher-than-usual tax rate for a person with his wealth is either due to poor planning or a savvy political maneuver to avoid the Mitt Romney problem.

His record as governor of Florida and his recent public pronouncements suggest his tax reform proposals would likely focus on lopsided tax cuts.  

Record as Governor of Florida

During his eight years as governor of Florida, Bush pushed through about $13 billion in tax cuts, a substantial portion of which went to the wealthiest Floridians. The most significant was his cut and eventual repeal of Florida’s intangibles tax, which amounted to more than three times the size of any other category of cuts enacted under his watch. This low-rate-tax on the value of residents’ intangible assets (such as stocks, bonds and accounts received) was one of Florida’s only progressive sources of tax revenue; eliminating it primarily benefited the state’s wealthiest residents and made its tax system even more regressive.

Besides repealing the intangibles tax, Bush backed a series of significant cuts to the property, sales and corporate taxes in the state. While the corporate tax cut went disproportionately to the wealthy, the cuts to the sales and property taxes provided low- and middle-income taxpayers with a break as well. These breaks, however, meant cuts to public services, including extremely damaging cuts to the state’s foster care system.

In 2001, state legislators pushed a sales tax reform package that would have expanded the sales tax base to new products and services and used the resulting revenue to lower the sales tax rate. The reform package generated opposition from groups whose products and services would no longer be exempt from sales tax. In the fact of this opposition, Bush opposed this sensible plan.

Because Florida does not have an income tax, it has one of the most regressive tax systems in the nation and Bush did nothing to change this reality. The year Bush left office, the bottom 20 percent of Florida taxpayers paid 13.5 percent of their income in state taxes, five times the 2.6 percent rate paid by the top 1 percent of Florida taxpayers. In other words, while Bush may tout Florida as a low-tax state, this is only true for the state’s wealthiest residents.

Tax Cutter and Tax Pledge Resister?

In recent years Bush has managed to distinguish himself from his fellow candidates in one major way: he is the only GOP presidential candidate that has refused to sign Grover Norquist’s anti-tax pledge. The infamous Norquist pledge requires that candidates promise to vote against any tax increase no matter what the circumstance.

Bush has indicated his openness to a deficit reduction deal that includes tax increases in exchange for substantial spending cuts. For example, in 2011 Bush said he would absolutely support a deficit reduction deal of one dollar of additional revenue for every ten dollars in spending cuts, a theoretical deal rejected by every single one of the 2012 GOP presidential candidates.

Yet Bush has based much of the case for his presidency on his record as a tax-cutting governor. His Super-PAC website, for instance, touts his record of cutting billions in taxes as part of his “limited government approach” that “helped unleash one of the most robust and dynamic economies in the nation.” Bush has also indicated his support for tax cuts at the federal level, saying at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) that despite trillions in debt and unfunded liabilities he believed that “You can lower taxes and create more economic opportunity that will generate more revenue for the government.”

Tax reform is shaping up to be a major issue in this campaign. Bush, like most of the other candidates, hasn’t formally outlined a proposal, but his choice of Glenn Hubbard, one of the architects of the regressive and budget busting Bush tax cuts and of Mitt Romney’s regressive tax cut plan from the 2012 campaign, as a top economic adviser sends a clear signal about the direction in which he’s heading.

Bipartisan Senate Plan Confuses Real Tax Reform with Tax Cuts for Multinational Corporations

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Sens. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Chuck Schumer (D-NY) today released a long-awaited tax reform plan that reads like a wish list for multinational corporations. 

The Senate Finance Committee working group’s report provides recommendations for restructuring the federal government’s international corporation tax rules. The plan is long on misguided ideas and short on specifics. The heart of the plan is a proposal to move to a territorial tax system in which all corporate income reported in countries other than the United States–including notorious tax havens such as Bermuda and the Cayman Islands–would be exempt from U.S. corporate income taxes.

As Citizens for Tax Justice has noted, such a system would dramatically increase the incentive for U.S. multinational corporations to use accounting maneuvers and paperwork to shift their profits from the United States to offshore tax havens. At a time when corporations have accumulated more than $2.1 trillion in offshore holdings, much of which may be U.S. profits that are reported as “earned” in zero-tax jurisdictions such as the Cayman Islands, the first step toward corporate tax reform should be removing incentives to offshore profits, not providing even more.

European countries that have some form of a territorial tax system have found it impossible to halt the use of offshore tax havens, so it seems likely that a U.S. territorial system would be equally leaky. Yet the framework claims the new plan would supposedly make it harder for corporations to engage in offshore shenanigans.

Further, under the Portman-Schumer blueprint, chronic tax avoiders such as Apple, Microsoft and GE will have new ways to avoid taxes. Another feature of the plan is a “patent box” regime that gives companies a special low tax rate on profits generated from legal monopolies, such as copyrights and patents. As CTJ has explained, patent boxes give companies tax breaks that are, at best, linked only to research that has long since been completed, and at worst lets companies game the system by pretending that most or all of their income is related to intellectual property.

One member of the Senate working group, noted with approval that the plan represents “the first step toward the kind of ‘win-win’ situations that are all too rare in this town.”

The plan gives big multinationals new avenues for tax avoidance whether they report their income in the U.S. or shift profits to tax havens, which is truly a “win-win” for corporations seeking to avoid paying their fair share. But the broad outlines of the Finance Committee’s recommendations make it clear that the plan would be a big loss for the rest of us. 

Jim Webb’s Confusing Stance(s) on Taxes

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When it comes to tax reform, former Virginia senator and Democratic presidential candidate Jim Webb has publicly discussed conflicting views.

Webb has proposed taxing investment income at the same higher tax rate that applies to wages. He has also proposed ending offshore profit-shifting by multinational corporations by closing the “deferral” loophole. On the other hand, Webb suggests that the nation should consider “shifting our tax policies away from income and more toward consumption.” Such policies would be highly regressive.

Asked this week by a Tax Notes reporter, “Can a consumption-based national tax system be squared with wanting to shift more of the tax burden to investment income?” CTJ Director Bob McIntyre offered a one-word answer: “No.”

During his time as a senator, Webb advocated for ending deferral, the policy that allows multinational corporations to indefinitely defer paying taxes on their foreign income, which are often U.S. profits that have been shifted offshore for tax purposes. In a book laying out his policy vision, Webb attacked deferral, noting that it actually helps corporations move their operations overseas and is part of the reason why many Fortune 500 companies pay nothing in federal taxes. Webb is one of only a few senators, including Sen. Ron Wyden and Sen. Bernie Sanders, who have staked out such a strong position in favor of closing this egregious corporate tax loophole.

Webb has also been a consistent critic of the preferential tax rates on capital gains and dividends. In 2012, he noted  that this loophole is “the largest contributor to overall income inequality over the last decade.”

While Webb supports increasing the capital gains and dividends tax rate, he opposes increasing tax rates on ordinary income such as wages. He was one of only five Democrats to vote against legislation that would have repealed the Bush tax cuts for those making more than $250,000. Webb reasoned that it would be preferable to raise the capital gains and dividend tax rates instead and to leave the Bush tax cuts on ordinary income in place.

Since he left the Senate, Webb has repeated these tax reform ideas, calling for an end to loopholes and exceptions that harm “economic fairness.”

But since beginning his campaign, Webb has taken a stark turn with his suggestion that we should move away from the progressive income tax and toward a regressive consumption tax. As is well known, such a tax change would be a huge boon to wealthy investors at the expense of working families. So where does Jim Webb stand these days when it comes to taxes? It’s very hard to say. 

Press Statement: Senate Tax Writers Float Tax Plan That Bends to Corporations’ Will

July 8, 2015 01:15 PM | | Bookmark and Share

For Immediate Release: Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Senate Tax Writers Float Tax Plan That Bends to Corporations’ Will

Following is a statement by Bob McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice, regarding a bipartisan tax framework announced today by U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Rob Portman (R-Ohio) that outlines their goals for international tax overhaul.

“Once again, the nation’s lawmakers are demonstrating that they are more interested in satisfying the concerns of corporate interests instead of thinking about the greater good. The plan adopts multinational corporations’ wish list almost verbatim–or, as they put it, ‘the National Association of Manufacturers may have said it best.’

“They propose a territorial tax system that would permanently exempt most offshore corporate profits from U.S. tax. They call for a special low tax rate on companies with legal monopolies (patents, copyrights and so forth) to benefit technology firms, movie makers, drug companies and others hugely profitable industries. They suggest what appear to be weak anti-abuse rules, with specific retention or at least possible retention of some of the worst offshore loopholes.

“Sens. Portman and Schumer repeatedly cite the concerns of multinational corporations as the source for their ideas. But they say almost nothing about the concerns of the rest of us.”

###


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Maine Tax Overhaul is a Boost for Low-Income Working Families

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Earlier this week, Maine lawmakers overrode Gov. Paul LePage’s veto of the state budget for fiscal year 2016, thus enacting a significant tax overhaul lawmakers had agreed to weeks earlier in a bipartisan fashion.  

The final tax reform package improves the state’s tax code and includes several major tax changes: lower income tax rates, a broader income tax base, new and enhanced refundable tax credits, a doubling of the homestead property tax exemption, an estate tax cut, and permanently higher sales tax rates.

With the exception of increased sales tax rates and a cut in the estate tax, the overhaul contains provisions that modestly improve the progressivity of Maine’s tax code  (see ITEP’s analysis below).

Coming to an agreement was not an easy feat. Gov. LePage’s initial tax proposal announced in January involved a costly, sweeping tax shift package, which would have resulted in a significant shift away from progressive personal income taxes toward a heavier reliance on regressive sales taxes.  While almost every Mainer would have received a tax cut under this plan, the benefits were heavily tilted in favor of the state’s wealthiest taxpayers and would have left the state with $300 million less revenue when fully enacted.

Democratic legislative leaders in Maine responded in April with a plan entitled, “A Better Deal for Maine”, the tax benefits of which would have been targeted to low- and middle-income Mainers rather than the wealthy. Finally, Republican lawmakers released their own proposal in May that would have hiked taxes on the average taxpayer with income below $89,000 while delivering a tax cut to wealthier taxpayers.

After months of debate and competing tax reform and tax cutting proposals,  lawmakers enacted the final package with a great deal of compromise between both parties of the Maine State Legislature.

Major Elements of the Final Tax Package:

  • Restructures the state’s personal income tax brackets and rates: the starting point of the top income threshold increases and the top rate lowers from 7.95% to 7.15%
  •  A significant increase in the standard deduction, which replaces the state’s zero percent bracket; the standard deduction is also phased out for upper-income taxpayers
  • All itemized deductions  are subject to the state’s cap (around $28,000; charitable contributions and medical expenses had previously been exempt from the cap); itemized deductions fully phase out for upper-income taxpayers
  • Introduces a new refundable credit for low- and middle-income Mainers to offset sales tax rate increases
  • Makes Maine’s earned income tax credit refundable at its current level (5 percent of the federal)
  • Doubles the homestead exemption for all Maine resident homeowners;
  • Maintains the current temporary 5.5% sales tax rate and the 8% tax on meals (set to drop to 5% and 7% this month)  while increasing the lodging tax to 9%;
  • Cuts the estate tax by raising exemption level to match federal level
  • Reduces local revenue sharing

While the plan includes some very good income tax base broadening measures–most notably applying all itemized deductions to the state’s cap and fully phasing out itemized deductions for upper-income taxpayers– it is still a subtle tax shift in that most of the personal income tax cuts are paid for with higher sales tax rates. As a result, the state will slightly shift its reliance away from its progressive personal income tax onto a narrow and regressive sales tax.  However, this plan is vastly different from other proposed and enacted tax shifts, as it reduces taxes for most low and moderate-income families and somewhat improves the progressivity of the tax code.

This outcome is accomplished in two main ways. First, the plan converts the state’s 5 percent nonrefundable Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to a refundable credit. In other words, low-income working families have the ability to receive the entire value of the credits regardless of any personal income tax liabilities, resulting in an increase of after-tax earnings for many working poor families in Maine by about $7 million to $9 million per year.

Second, the plan enacts a new refundable sales tax fairness credit, which will lessen the impact of the included sales tax rate increases on low- and moderate-income Mainers.   The credit has a maximum value of $250 and begins to phase out at $20,000 for single filers and $40,000 for married filers. The refundability of this credit ensures that taxpayers will get the full value of the credit regardless of how much tax they owe.

With the inclusion of the refundable sales tax credit as well as the refundable EITC, Maine’s new budget will direct approximately $40 million more to low- and moderate income families in the state. This is indeed a win for working families; however, threats from Gov. LePage to dismantle the income tax have not waned. In his veto letter LePage proclaimed, “Mainers deserve to have the debate over whether the income tax should be phased out. The future of our state depends on our ability to be competitive with the nation and the word. We must work aggressively each year to cut back the income tax until it’s gone.”

The decrease or disappearance of income taxes would undoubtedly result in tax increases and spending cuts elsewhere. Based on LePage’s previous proposals, such changes would adversely affect low and middle-income groups. If the recent bipartisanship displayed among Maine’s legislatures is any indication of future policymaking, they will continue to remain strong in rejecting damaging proposals, while lifting up proposals benefitting Maine families.  

State Rundown 7/1: Fiscal Year Blues

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The budget showdown between Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf and the state legislature continues. Republican lawmakers want to close a large budget gap without new taxes, while the governor has proposed a property tax reform measure and a new tax on natural gas extraction. Wolf has threatened to veto a budget with no tax increases. With the fiscal year ending today, pressure is on for leaders to make a deal. If that deadline is passes without a resolution, most observers expect business to continue as usual for state workers in the short term.

Washington state legislators reached an agreement on transportation spending that includes an increase in the state’s gas excise tax. The $15 billion package will increase the tax by 11.9 cents-per-gallon over three years. Gov. Jay Inslee previously pledged to sign any deal between the House and Senate, making enactment of this deal likely.

New Jersey is poised to increase the state EITC to 30 percent of the federal credit after a surprise endorsement from Gov. Chris Christie. As New Jersey Policy Perspective notes, the increase will help over 500,000 working families and boost the state economy: “It’s been estimated…that the EITC has a multiplier effect of 1.5 to 2 in local economies – in other words, every dollar of tax credit paid ends up generating $1.50 to $2 in local economic activity.”

Connecticut lawmakers reached a deal on the budget in a special session after Gov. Dannel Malloy called lawmakers back to the capital at the behest of corporate lobbyists. At issue was an increase in the state’s sales tax on computer and data processing services from 1 to 3 percent, as well as new combined reporting rules for businesses operating in Connecticut. The legislature backed down on those changes after corporations decried the measures and leaned heavily on the governor. The new deal maintains the sales tax rate on computer and data processing and delays the start of combined reporting by one year.  To make up the lost revenue from those changes, lawmakers reduced Medicaid spending by $12.5 million, reduced a scheduled state employee pay increase by .5%, partially delayed a transfer of sales tax revenue to transportation projects, and delayed some new municipal revenue sharing.  

Oregon will launch a new experiment this month that aims to change the way we fund road construction and repair. The program, called OReGO, will charge 5,000 volunteer drivers a 1.5 cent-per-mile road usage charge, also known as a vehicle miles traveled (VMT) tax, rather than the traditional state gas excise tax at the pump. The program is meant to address declining revenues from the gas tax, as vehicles become more fuel-efficient and the maintenance needs of aging infrastructure skyrocket. While some observers are optimistic that VMT taxes could prove to be a more sustainable revenue source, there is reason to be more skeptical. As ITEP’s Carl Davis points out in a new report, “[Oregon’s] new VMT tax is an unsustainable revenue source because it contains the same design flaw that has plagued the state’s gasoline tax for almost a century—a stagnant, fixed tax rate that is incapable of keeping pace with inflation.” Davis suggests indexing current state gas excise tax rates to inflation before beginning to experiment with entirely new funding mechanisms.

 

States Still In Legislative Session:
Alabama
Illinois
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Hampshire
North Carolina
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Washington
Wisconsin