Photo Credit: Shutterstock.com/Kiev.Victor
August 5, 2013
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Instead of spending August on the beach, corporate lobbyists are
readying arguments for when Congress returns in September about why
corporate taxes should be lowered.
But they’re lies. You need to know why so you can spread the truth.
Lie #1: U.S. corporate tax rates are higher than the tax rates of
other big economies. Wrong. After deductions and tax credits, the
average corporate tax rate in the U.S. is
lower.
According to the Congressional Research Service, the United States has
an effective corporate tax rate of 27.1%, compared to an average of
27.7% in the other large economies of the world.
Lie #2: U.S. corporations need lower taxes in order to make
investments in new jobs. Wrong again. Corporations are sitting on almost
$2 trillion of cash they don’t know what to do with. The 1000 largest
U.S. corporations alone are hoarding almost $
1 trillion.
Rather than investing in expansion, they’re buying back their own
stocks or raising dividends. They have no economic incentive to expand
unless or until consumers want to buy more, but consumer spending is
pinched because the middle class keeps shrinking and the median wage,
adjusted for inflation, keeps dropping.
Lie #3: U.S. corporations need a tax break in order to be globally
competitive. Baloney. The “competitiveness” of American corporations is
becoming a meaningless term because most big U.S. corporations are no
longer American companies at all. The biggest have been creating
way more jobs abroad than in the U.S.
A growing percent of their customers are outside the U.S. Their
investors are global. They do their R&D all over the world. And they
park their profits wherever taxes are lowest — another reason they pay
so little in taxes. (Don’t be fooled that a “tax amnesty” that will
bring all that money back to America and generate lots of new
investments and jobs here — see item #2 above).
Corporations want corporate
tax reduction to be the centerpiece of “tax reform” come the fall. The
President has already signaled a willingness to sign on in return for
more infrastructure investment. But the arguments for corporate tax
reduction are specious.
Robert B. Reich has served in
three national administrations, most recently as secretary of labor
under President Bill Clinton. He also served on President Obama's
transition advisory board. His latest book is Aftershock: The Next
Economy and America's Future. His homepage is
www.robertreich.org.
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