Study: 72% of Fortune 500 Companies Used Tax Havens
Small Business Owner & Arizona PIRG Education Fund Highlight Impacts to Small Businesses and Individual Taxpayers
Arizona PIRG Education Fund and Citizens for Tax Justice
Tax loopholes encouraged more than 72 percent of Fortune 500 companies – including companies in Arizona – to maintain subsidiaries in offshore tax havens as of 2014, according to “Offshore Shell Games,” released today by Arizona PIRG Education Fund and Citizens for Tax Justice. Collectively, the companies reported booking nearly $2 trillion offshore for tax purposes, with just 30 companies accounting for 65 percent of the total, or $1.35 trillion. According to the report, offshore tax loopholes used by U.S. corporations cost Arizona $200 million in state tax revenue.
“When corporations dodge their taxes, the public ends up paying,” said Jenifer Wong of the Arizona PIRG Education Fund. “The American multinationals that take advantage of tax havens use our roads, benefit from our education system and large consumer market, and enjoy the security we have here, but are ultimately taking a free ride at the expense of other taxpayers.”
“All too often, corporations’ offshore cash isn’t offshore at all—it’s right here in the United States,” said Robert McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice. “Corporations are using skilled tax attorneys to make it appear on paper that their U.S. profits, and their U.S.-based cash, are being earned, and kept, in foreign tax havens. The tax code makes this scam possible. Incredibly, Congress is considering pouring salt on the wound by giving companies a special low tax rate to ‘repatriate’ profits that, in many cases, are likely already here.”
The new study highlights that while most very large companies use tax havens, a smaller subset are most aggressive about using offshore tax havens to avoid taxes.
Key findings of the report include:
– At least 358 Fortune 500 companies operate subsidiaries in tax haven jurisdictions, as of 2014. These companies maintain at least 7,622 tax haven subsidiaries. The 30 companies with the most money booked offshore for tax purposes collectively operate 1,225 tax haven subsidiaries.
– Bermuda and Cayman Islands remain the most popular tax haven jurisdictions. About 60 percent of companies with any tax haven subsidiaries registered at least one in Bermuda or the Cayman Islands.
– The reported earnings of these Cayman Islands subsidiaries is not just implausible, it’s impossible. American multinationals collectively claim that earned profits in Bermuda and the Cayman Islands equal to 1,643 percent and 1,600 percent respectively of each country’s entire GDP or yearly economic output.
– The 30 companies with the most money booked offshore for tax purposes collectively hold nearly $1.4 trillion overseas. That is 65 percent of the more than $2.1 trillion that Fortune 500 companies together report holding offshore.
– Only 57 companies disclose the amount they would expect to pay in U.S. taxes if they didn’t report profits offshore for tax purposes. All told, these 57 companies would collectively owe $184.4 billion in additional federal taxes, equal to the entire state budgets of California, Virginia, and Indiana combined. The average tax rate the 56 companies currently pay to other countries on this income is a mere 6.3 percent, implying that most of it is booked to tax havens.
Here are some of the most well-known companies, including one headquartered in Arizona, that were highlighted by the study:
– Avnet: This technology distributor headquartered in Phoenix, Arizona has offshored over $3 billion in 43 different tax haven subsidiaries around the world, including four in Ireland and three in the British Virgin Islands, both notorious tax havens.
– Walmart publicly reported operating zero tax haven subsidiaries in 2014 and for the past decade. Despite this lack of reporting, over the past decade Walmart’s accumulated offshore profits have grown from $6.8 billion in 2005 to $23.3 billion in 2014, and in reality the corporation operates 75 tax haven subsidiaries.
– American Express: The credit card company officially reports $9.7 billion offshore for tax purposes on which it would otherwise owe $3 billion in U.S. taxes That implies that American Express currently pays only a 4 percent tax rate on its offshore profits to foreign governments, suggesting that most of the money is booked in tax havens levying little to no tax. American Express maintains 23 subsidiaries in offshore tax havens.
– Nike: The sneaker giant officially holds $8.3 billion offshore for tax purposes, on which it would otherwise owe $2.7 billion in U.S. taxes. That implies Nike pays a mere 2.5 percent tax rate to foreign governments on those offshore profits, suggesting that nearly all of the money is officially held by subsidiaries in tax havens. Nike does this in part by licensing the trademarks for some of its products to 3 subsidiaries in Bermuda to which it then pays royalties.
“Because Desert Divers pays its fair share of taxes, my business is at a disadvantage against the huge corporations that can get away with paying very little or no taxes at all,” said Alex Huhn, owner of a scuba dive shop in Tucson. “Businesses should compete on level ground, based on their innovation and what they can offer to customers, not based on their access to savvy tax attorneys.”
The report concludes that to end tax haven abuse, Congress should end incentives for companies to shift profits offshore, close the most egregious offshore loopholes, and increase transparency.
“Offshore Shell Games” is available for download at: link.