Sounds great -- and that's how the story played. "Obama Targets Overseas Tax Dodge," headlined The Washington Post. But the reality is murkier; the president's accusatory rhetoric perpetuates many myths.Read the rest for his explanation of how we're not going to be raking in money by Obama's plan and how it may actually cost us U.S. jobs.
Myth: Aided by those overpaid lobbyists, American multinationals are taxed lightly -- less so than their foreign counterparts.
Reality: Just the opposite. Most countries don't tax the foreign profits of their multinational firms at all. Take a Swiss multinational with operations in South Korea. It pays a 27.5 percent Korean corporate tax on its profits and can bring home the rest tax-free. By contrast, a U.S. firm in Korea pays the Korean tax and, if it returns the profits to the United States, faces the 35 percent U.S. corporate tax rate. American companies can defer the U.S. tax by keeping the profits abroad (naturally, many do), and when repatriated, companies get a credit for foreign taxes paid. In this case, they'd pay the difference between the Korean rate (27.5 percent) and the U.S. rate (35 percent).
Myth: When U.S. multinationals invest abroad, they destroy American jobs.
Reality: Not so. Sure, many U.S. firms have shut American factories and opened plants elsewhere. But most overseas investments by U.S. multinationals serve local markets. Only 10 percent of their foreign output is exported back to the United States, says Harvard economist Fritz Foley. When Wal-Mart opens a store in China, it doesn't close one in California. On balance, all the extra foreign sales create U.S. jobs for management, research and development (almost 90 percent of American multinationals' R&D occurs in the United States) and the export of components. A study by Foley and economists Mihir Desai of Harvard and James Hines of the University of Michigan estimates that for every 10 percent increase in U.S. multinationals' overseas payrolls, their American payrolls increase almost 4 percent.
Myth: Plugging overseas corporate tax loopholes will dramatically improve the budget outlook as multinationals pay their "fair" share.
Monday, May 11, 2009
The myths in Obama's tax on multinational companies
Robert Samuelson exposes the myths behind Obama's claims that he will gain revenues my taxing companies that do business overseas.
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Taxes
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1 comments:
We don't need to read the rest to know that "we're not going to be raking in money by Obama's plan". By this time we already know Obama's claims are pulled from thin air, only his cultist-followers still believe him. The rest of us can watch and snicker, there ain't nothing we can do.
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