Showing posts with label Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2013

538 Organizations Call on U.S. Senators to Support the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act


WASHINGTON – The South Carolina Small Business Chamber and the American Sustainable Business Council signed onto a letter released yesterday by the Americans for Tax Fairness and the Financial Accountability & Corporate Transparency (FACT) Coalition  that included 538 organizations calling on Members of the U.S. Senate to support the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act (S. 1533).

The legislation, introduced by Senators Carl Levin (D-MI), Mark Begich (D-AK), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), would close tax loopholes that encourage U.S. corporations to move jobs, profits and operations offshore and avoid paying their fair share of taxes.

Some tax loopholes allow corporations to use complex accounting schemes to make it appear that profits earned in the United States are actually generated in other countries, often a tax haven with little or no tax on profits. This enables those corporations to substantially lower the amount of U.S. income taxes they pay. By closing some of these loopholes, the Levin bill would raise $220 billion over ten years, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation. This could stop some or all of the impending next round of automatic spending cuts under the budget sequester, which are projected to cost 800,000 jobs, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

The 538 letter signers represent tens of millions of Americans, many of whom are still feeling the effects of the “Great Recession” while multinational corporations book record profits. The list of signers includes some of the largest public and private sector unions, as well as many of the most well-known non-profits in America working for the public good.

“As Washington begins a new budget debate, lawmakers should replace the next round of budget cuts with new revenue raised by closing offshore tax loopholes,” said Frank Clemente, campaign manager of Americans for Tax Fairness, which co-led the effort to secure letter signers. “Too many Members of Congress express support for the idea of closing tax loopholes, but never say how they would do it. The answer is to support the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act.”

“When corporations use tax havens to dodge the taxes they owe, the rest of us pick up the tab, either through higher taxes, cuts to important programs, or a bigger deficit,” said Dan Smith, Tax and Budget Advocate for U.S. PIRG, which is a member of the FACT coalition, which co-led the letter-signing effort. “Some budget decisions are tough, but closing the offshore tax loopholes that let large companies shift their tax burden to the rest of us is a no-brainer. Congress should pass this legislation to level the playing field for small businesses and restore fairness to our tax system.”

Among other things, the letter explains that this legislation would close or tighten tax loopholes that have been used by some of the most profitable multinational corporations – Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft and Nike – to avoid paying their fair share of taxes.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

'Shared sacrifice' in debt reduction should include international tax loopholes

By Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) 
The Hill's Congress Blog
July 26, 2011

As Washington considers solutions to our debt crisis, I believe a fundamental principle -- before we consider cutting vital programs or raising tax rates—is ensuring everyone pays their fair share. I always find it impossible to explain why a pharmacist in Lockhart, Texas, or a small retail store in San Marcos has to pay more in taxes because some multinational can duck and dodge its obligations by moving money to Bermuda or the Cayman Islands.

Closing loopholes that allow billions in tax dollars to slip through the cracks each year would restore much-needed revenue, and would also help our economic growth by leveling the playing field for small business and improving public confidence in our tax system. In particular, the widespread use of international tax games in offshore tax havens costs the U.S. Treasury an estimated $100 billion each year in lost tax revenues. Our failure to close these tax loopholes means we are forced to borrow more from foreign creditors or make hardworking families and small businesses pick up the slack. Equally important, international corporate tax loopholes provide incentives to invest abroad instead of at home, shipping jobs offshore and harming our local communities. The Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act that I am introducing again this Congress with Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) takes aim at these abuses.

This bill will stop some of the most egregious offshore shenanigans and provide powerful new tools to combat tax abuses and reduce the incentives to send U.S. jobs and money offshore. With this economy still precarious, what better source for needed tax revenue than those who are shifting jobs abroad to avoid paying taxes at home? America needs the revenue and American firms who play by the rules deserve a level field.

Unfortunately, while most of America understands this self-evident proposition, there are still many, aided by well-paid lobbyists, who are pushing in the opposite direction. Among the giveaways they advocate is a so-called “corporate repatriation tax holiday” that would reward multinational corporations for stashing billions in tax havens by giving them a $79 billion tax break on this overseas money. While billed as a job creation measure, prior attempts in 2004 amounted to a massive windfall for a few multinationals and their shareholders, while doing nothing to create jobs or stimulate the economy.

Even worse, this corporate tax holiday encourages corporations to shift even more jobs and profits overseas hoping for the next tax giveaway. Remarkably, the proponents’ audacity is not limited to a temporary tax holiday; some would go even further, pushing for a permanent tax exemption on foreign profits. It is not hard to see how a system that lets investment overseas completely escape U.S. taxes is a recipe for job creation abroad and more layoffs at home.

We hear a lot these days about shared sacrifice, but usually from people who expect the most from those that have the least. Before we ask for greater sacrifice from hard-working families and small businesses, we should first ask these multinational corporations to sacrifice their international tax loopholes and we should refuse to open new ones. Providing a level playing field and expecting everyone to pay their fair share should be the foundation of our tax system, and closing these tax loopholes — through legislation like the Stop Tax Haven Abuse Act — should be a critical element of any deficit reduction package.