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Maybe I've just become jaded about American politics but every time a politician says something like this I tend to just assume that they're doing it to gain favor with the public while knowing there's nearly a 0% chance it will actually happen.
These things look the same even when there is an actual chance of it happening.
It's ridiculous that lawmakers to try to guilt or shame companies into paying more taxes. If they want companies to pay more or not use loopholes they should raise taxes or close the loopholes. Otherwise they are penalizing any company that tries to "be patriotic" or "pay its fair share" by forcing it to compete on an uneven playing field with companies that aren't paying those higher taxes.
How do you expect bills to get passed if the President doesn't talk about them?
He's not trying to guilt companies into paying more taxes. Fairly certain he knows that would be a colossal waste of time.

He's trying to stir up support for closing the loopholes.

To change a law, you don't just put up a bill for a vote; you first need to drum up support, which means getting politicians motivated for it which means riling up their political base. That is to say, to change a law, you have to get citizens caring about it -- hence the rhetoric about 'economic patriotism'.
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Sounds good, but they damned well better apply the same rules to individuals who use offshore tax shelters too. How unpatriotic is that? Deserters!
>How unpatriotic is that? Deserters!

Yeah! Nationalism! Everyone should put the interests of a blob of land delineated by imaginary lines above their own!

Can we stick to arguments not based on nationalist fervor?

...he says while sipping a glass of nationally funded water, on his computer which arrived via nationally funded sea ports, which sends data over nationally funded computer networks, using a protocol developed with national funding.
>he says while sipping a glass of nationally funded water

The water wasn't created by the government, the government didn't build the pipes carrying it to my house, and any first world country could have helped to facilitate this glass of water just as much as the country I happen to inhabit.

>using a protocol developed with national funding

Along with contributions from Xerox, BBN, UCL, a number of US universities... And why, exactly, does the fact that a government partially funded a nice project mean that nationalism is a good motive?

This is a tax debate, and with any tax debate, it's worth remembering what our tax dollars get us. It seems like you're equating "nationalism" with "government", which is most certainly too broad.
>It seems like you're equating "nationalism" with "government", which is most certainly too broad.

No, this is precisely what you are doing. I mentioned that we should not make arguments based on nationalism, and you responded.

>...he says while sipping a glass of nationally funded water, on his computer which arrived via nationally funded sea ports, which sends data over nationally funded computer networks, using a protocol developed with national funding.

which, as you just mentioned, has to do with government, not nationalism.

Your comment came in response to someone calling not paying taxes, "unpatriotic", and saying the US is a "blob of land delineated by imaginary lines", when in reality the whole point of this debate revolves around the fact that entities residing in this "blob of land" are expected to pay taxes, in return for which a whole host of benefits are granted.

It's not nationalism to malign those who benefit from the collective tax paying body without contributing to it.

> Can we stick to arguments not based on nationalist fervor?

We can, perhaps. The POTUS generally has a harder time winning arguments by doing so.

The corporate tax is an absolute mess. Compliance costs are insane. Closing one loophole opens up another. It creates incentives for "paying" executives with look-the-other-way corporate jets and luxury hotels and conferences in the Bahamas.

It is also indeterminate in how regressive it is[1]...some companies and industries can offload almost all of the tax burden (incidence) onto their workers, while others offload it onto their shareholders. Even in the case where shareholders shoulder the majority of the burden, ownership distribution can still heavily affect how progressive it is in reality.

The worst part is that it just isn't that great of a form of revenue. Doubling our effective corporate tax rate would be impossible politically. Superficially, rates can be raised, but tax lawyers will exploit the shit out of it anyway. A coalition might be able to raise it by an effective 25% max before every corporation in the US teams up to vote them six feet under. Seems like a lot of political capital to waste just to get a measly $80B/year. [2].

IMO, the perfect solution would be to eliminate the corporate tax altogether, and tax capital gains and dividends as income instead. At least then you can be assured that it is progressive, and you have more direct control over how progressive it is.

[1] http://www.urban.org/uploadedpdf/1001349_corporate_tax_incid... [1] http://www.kc.frb.org/Publicat/RegionalRWP/RRWP07-01.pdf [2] http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxfacts/displayafact.cfm?Doc...

> IMO, the perfect solution would be to eliminate the corporate tax altogether, and tax capital gains and dividends as income instead.

We already tax capital gains on short-term investments as income. Taxing long-term capital gains at the same rate as income would have a number of other unpleasant consequences

- It would eliminate the incentive to hold investments for longer than 365 days

- It would reduce the incentive to invest in the market (since you would quite literally be paying double taxes on this income, instead of more like 1.5x the tax (which is what we sometimes misleadingly refer to as "double taxation"))

Regarding point #1 - if you sell a stock before 1 year, you already pay normal income tax on any gains. This encourages buy-and-hold, long-term investing, which I believe most people on HN would agree is good for the economy at large, as it reduces volatility and ensures that shareholder incentives are better aligned with growing the company.

Regarding point #2, which is mildly controversial (but IMHO only because it is misunderstood): it is good to encourage investments in the economy, because this is literally how business raise capital. Readers of Hacker News should be well aware of the importance of this in the private equity markets (ie, venture capital, which is technically a form of private equity). Similarly, in the public markets, it is good to create incentives for people to park their money in places which help spur the economy[0].

[0] In theory (obviously not always in practice), providing capital to a business has the potential to stimulate the economy more than providing capital to an individual, as the business uses that capital to pursue a profit, hire employees, etc.

In theory you are correct but the marginal investor (who sets the price of an asset) will always trade based on its present day value. So, in reality, it wouldn't affect market rates much.

The corporate tax, on the other hand, is a heinous tax that hurts our economy substantially. We have to make the money somewhere.

"- It would reduce the incentive to invest in the market (since you would quite literally be paying double taxes on this income, instead of more like 1.5x the tax"

Please distinguish between:

I make money. It is taxed at X%.

1) I put that money into the market, other people use it to make more money, I receive some money ($Y) for that (in dividends or raised stock price) and that is again taxed at X%.

2) I put that money into making myself a better worker. Next year, I make $(X+Y) more than I would have. The $X I spent, I got to write off as a business expense (maybe). The $Y is taxed at X%.

Point 2: You are not paying double taxes on the income. You are paying taxes on the profit you made selling the investment. If I invest $100 and make $10, I pay taxes on the $10, not the original $100 investment.
Capital gains tax rates are roughly half income tax rates.

Currently, we say "double taxation" when we refer to being taxed at the corporate level, and then again at the shareholder level (either as long-term capital gains or as income). Shareholders don't directly feel the corporate tax (though they are still effected by it).

What I meant was that, if we eliminated the corporate tax but increased the capital gains tax to be equal to the income tax rate, the tax rate that shareholders pay on the gains would be twice what they are currently paying.

(The actual incidence (burden) of the tax is more complicated to calculate; I'm simply referring to the direct tax rates.)

This is all very rough, of course, since marginal tax rates vary widely.

> IMO, the perfect solution would be to eliminate the corporate tax altogether, and tax capital gains and dividends as income instead.

I enthusiastically agree with this. There should be little benefit to holding an asset for longer period to evade taxes. I have friends who regularly end up with losses on trades just so they would avoid being "taxed at income" for gains. It's absurd.

There are also plenty of loopholes for those who know what they're doing... like shorting a futures contract where you own the underlying asset, effectively locking in it's price until past the 12 month mark.

> There should be little benefit to holding an asset for longer period to evade taxes. I have friends who regularly end up with losses on trades just so they would avoid being "taxed at income" for gains.

Without more detail, I'm not entirely sure what you're referring to, but you seem to be conflating two concepts (the tax effects of a long-term capital loss and the tax effects of a short-term investment compared to a long-term investment).

IMHO, there absolutely should be a benefit to holding an asset for 12 months (compared to less), as buy-and-hold investing is better for the companies being traded, and reduces volatility in the economy compared to speculative day-trading[0].

> like shorting a futures contract where you own the underlying asset, effectively locking in it's price until past the 12 month mark.

This is a strategy that's beyond most casual investors who simply trade mutual funds, sure, but I'm not sure I would classify this as a tax loophole - if so, we'd have to call a normal covered call an "investment loophole".

[0] This has nothing to do with high-frequency ("ultra short-term") trading by computers; it's about encouraging long-term vs. short-term investing by individuals.

Absolutely in agreement. The Tax code in the US is insane.

Instead of criticizing companies that do the math and determine it's a smart [business] decision to relocate or whatever just to reduce tax liability, why not instead focus on what is making these companies so inclined to make said decision?

What companies are doing is nothing more than citizens within the US can and choose to do, they move to places where their tax burden is less. Where you can get the same or similar services for less of your income.

However politicians know it is easy to vilify corporations thereby allowing them to either out right lie about how taxation works or lie by omission.

Companies moving their head quarters out of your country should be a clear signal that your doing it wrong, except in the case of the US politicians want to punish them for doing what is right for them, their share holders, and their employees.

The power tripping in Washington is so extreme that punishing is their first reaction to anything they don't like.

The Administration will probably just Executive Order their way into a "solution".
I'm confused. If I cut off my big toe and mail it to a different state, can I claim that I should only pay taxes in that state? Why, then, can a company move a small and inconsequential part of itself to a different jurisdiction, then be taxed under that other jurisdiction?

Companies moving out entirely would be analogous to people moving. Companies moving out on paper while continuing to do business in the same location is analogous to tax evasion.

If the tax code says that the location of your right big toe decides where your entire body pays tax, regardless of where other parts of that body is located (immediately adjacent to the toe or scattered across the world), then yes, where the big toe is, that's where you pay tax.

The analogy is more like that the location of you navel decides where you pay tax, and you discover that if you shift your weight around a little, your navel ends op on the other side of the line.

The problem is that the tax code fundamentally assumes that businesses are reasonably local and contained operations (analogous to a single body) and only deals with sprawling multinationals through monkey patching in an environment where policies appearing to benefit big businesses isn't exactly a big vote-grabber.

I think the proper analogy would be cutting off your head and mailing it to the other state. But that would be a silly analogy wouldn't it?

An analogy that might work is to move over the county line to reduce property taxes but continue to travel back into the original county to work or shop. Even then, you would still be paying some form of taxes to the original county; much like a company moving countries is not going to eliminate ALL tax liabilities.

By the way, if it is deemed legal then it is not tax evasion.

> What companies are doing is nothing more than citizens within the US can and choose to do, they move to places where their tax burden is less.

Wherever you, as an individual, move in the world, you are still supposed to pay US taxes. The US is one of the very few countries in the world to do this. The number of people renouncing their US citizenship to get away from this is on the rise.

A friend at work who is a US citizen and has been living in Canada for ~15 years just found out he owes back taxes for those 15 years to the USA.

He's been told that as of July 1 2014, renouncing US citizenship will have no impact, he still has to pay back taxes, and forward taxes.

I'm doing some googling now, and this might be it, or at least related, I'm not certain

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/fatca-facts-what-canadians-nee...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Account_Tax_Compliance_...

It would be really awesome if you(or your friend) had a blog to keep us up-to-date on how this turns out. I can't imagine what 15 years(plus penalties?) in back taxes looks like. I would consider just disappearing.

Assuming she/he is willing to share that personal info.

It's a huge amount of money, as he's basically been working insane overtime in IT for the last 15 years.

Disappearing is not really an option - we're very close to the US border and going there on weekends is one of the major things we do, also, Canada will expedite to the US, and I wouldn't be surprised if they track him down, as we're talking many hundreds of thousands of dollars.

> What companies are doing is nothing more than citizens within the US can and choose to do, they move to places where their tax burden is less.

Note that is one thing US citizens cannot do, if you mean a different country versus a different state. The US is one of relatively few countries that tax citizens (and green card holders) no matter where you choose to live, or where your income is earned. (There can be some allowance for taxes already paid.) You can of course give up your citizenship, but good luck getting back into the country.

The amusing thing is that corporations are legally considered people. Why aren't these now foreign companies forced to jump through similar hoops foreigners are, and also subject to the same restrictions on applying money to the political process?

This would require significant tax treaty changes. http://www.crossborderalliance.com/Resources/NRA%20Tax%20gui... has some of the basics of how it works.

Essentially, this has major consequences on foreign investments which were built on the assumptions of a individual tax.

Further, there are trusts that can limit tax burdens. It is quite possible that the total taxation would decrease, and it would decrease on those at the top of the heap, not at the bottom.

We would have to figure out how to rebalance. Consider this a refactoring on code that is not easily unit testable.

"Economic Patriotism" as described here is a ridiculous concept. There is nothing patriotic about demanding that another guy pay more taxes. Its like signing up someone else for the military. Want to show patriotism? Write a check of your own money to the Treasury Dept.

Edit: I don't mean to suggest the tax code shouldn't be changed. I just mean compelling others to sacrifice, doesn't make a person patriotic.

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But the argument here is that corporations are not paying their fair share of the taxes. To pay your share of taxes is patriotic. Hence avoiding taxes, while reaping the benefits, is not patriotic. People get angry when poor people abuse welfare, why aren't they annoyed when wealthy companies abuse a countries benefits. We have an educated base of people, a leading technology base, a law structure which favors corporations in many ways, and a secure place to put offices, all of which the government is directly responsible for. (I would have also put, infrastructure but... we don't have that anymore, nor do we have low crime rates, at least in comparison to other modern industrial nations).

We aren't calling Obama patriotic for suggesting or implementing this. We are calling the companies who do this anyway, who pay U.S. taxes when they could avoid them, patriotic, and those who don't, who mainly operate here, who reap the benefits of our country and don't pay their share? Parasites.

But what does it mean to pay one's fair share? What criteria should be used to determine it? Are taxes the only way that one's fair share can be paid? How should we treat outliers on both ends of the spectrum?

We haven't even finished debating questions like these. Yet taxation is needed in some form, so people do the best they can. Unfortunately, that means planning based on the assumptions of specific answers to unsettled questions.

And that's why both Obama (and Democrats, but not in this article) and the Republicans in the article talked about reforming the tax code.

But the more important point was that these corporations are definitely evading the spirit of our current (outdated) laws, and we need to close this loophole sooner rather than later (i.e. after the years it will likely take to fix our tax system).

To draw a programmer analogy, we should refactor the laws, but this is a critical bug fix. We can't stop supporting the old code just because the new code might fix it.

You seem to be describing tax evasion. Tax avoidance is paying your share of tax!
If fair minded legislators tried to write the law such that people in a situation like yours would pay $X and you are paying substantially less than $X, that is arguably "not paying your share". Of course, that characterization is not necessarily the reality.
In the context of what is socially acceptable, tax avoidance and tax evasion are the same thing.

Again, we aren't talking legality here we are talking morality. The result of the discussion on morality is an attempt to change our legal system. To say "well one of those things is legal" is basically a tautological fallacy in a discussion on whether it should be legal, which is what this is.

Socially acceptable to whom? Avoidance is reading the rules written at length by presumably clever people and then acting accordingly to comply with them while minimizing one's tax bill taking all considerations into account. Only a fool would do otherwise.

As quoted "You must pay taxes. But there's no law that says you gotta leave a tip". As to the morality, it's worth considering those of us who try to live within our incomes so we can afford to pay taxes to a government that can't live within its income'.

From a British perspective: http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/andrewlilico/100024862/...

'Companies-have-a-moral-duty-to-pay-no-more-tax-than-legally-required'.

Tax avodoidance used to be normal tax planning - reducing your tax burden within the law.

But now it has a different meaning.

Tax avoidance is the legal gray area between outright evasion and tax planning.

Avoidance is the bit that your lawyers and accountants say is legal, but which hasn't yet been tested in courts. The plan might not last long before the law is changed. And you might be asked to repay some tax.

Tax avoidance is the use of bizarre systems that serve no purpose but to reduce tax burden. Starbucks is a great example here. They have a gajillion shops in the UK; they employ many people; they're expanding. By any sensible analysis Starbucks is a sucessful company in England. Yet the shops make no profit. The only reason they make no profit is because they have to buy buy coffee beans from one supplier, and that supplier prices the beans very much higher than other bean roasters. That bean-roasting supplier happens to be based in a tax haven.

Can you agree that there is a difference between "not paying tax that you legally do not need to" and "going out of your way to create bizarre semi-legal schemes in the hope that you get away with it; especially taking into account the numbers of people working to create tax avoidance schemes and people working to investigate such schemes".

The other moral point is that these companies make full use of the products of the tax system - they would most certainly call the police if one of their offices was burgled - and so they should consider making sensible donations to that tax system.

(And before anyone mentions wage taxes or sales taxes: these are paid by the employees or by the customers, and merely collected by the company).

There are also business rates. (For non-UK readers: property tax on commercial property.)

I'm surprised at the implication that because of all this shit they're spending money on - shops, employees, expansion, etc. - they must be profitable. (Maybe they are, I don't know. Maybe they are stashing it away elsewhere. It would certainly make sense for them to do that.) But it doesn't automatically follow, because profit is what you have left after you've paid for all this stuff. All this expenditure is in fact bad for the bottom line.

You can't even argue that the money has to come from income, and that therefore the very fact of their profitless expansion is evidence of sharp practice. People have been known to lend out money! Sometimes they'll do it merely in exchange for a share in your business. If they like the cut of your jib, you don't even have to be making money yourself in the first place.

...which is why I'm sort of surprised to see this line of thought implied on HN ;)

I think he is incorrect in his assertion that companies should choose to pay more taxes than legally required, but I think he is right to say it, because it'll build political support for changes to laws which (in my opinion) need to be made.
In the US, we encourage everyone to "go out and live the American dream". Open a business. Be successful!

But as soon as you become successful, we will punish you via a huge tax burden among other things.

We explicitly advocate success, yet implicitly advocate punishment of success.

It's not hard to imageine why so many companies often see relocation as a way to relieve their tax burden. It's nothing a normal citizen doesn't do.

Instead of focusing on punishing companies (who will eventually just up and leave altogether), we need to fix the core problem that is encouraging the behavior -- ie. the tax code.

How is it punish?

You only pay on profit and it's clear up front when you start.

You can agree or disagree on it's efficacy on growing overall prosperity but to call it 'punishment' is strange.

I chose the word "punishment" because corporate taxes (and taxes of top tier earners) are dramatically higher than "everyday joe's".[1]

An argument can be made that they earn more/have more profit, and therefore can afford more in taxes -- yet that is the very punishment I'm referring to. "You are more successful than I, therefore you owe a higher percentage of your income".

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_tax_in_the_United_States...

But it's extra money. If you don't want to pay corporate taxes, spend the money on expanding the business, wages, or dividends.
> But it's extra money.

What? Who are you to decide how a company or individual spends their money?

Your tone implies you feel that just because some company or individual has more money than they can spend, means they should pay more in taxes?

Again, that's whether you support regressive or progressive tax systems and their efficacy. What is fair? But it's not punishment.
What is fair? I personally think a flat tax is the fairest. Some countries have already implemented this, such as the flat 13% tax rate in Russia which has been a success so far.

Why do we charge people more just because they earned more? If you are a citizen, you should owe the same flat amount (percentage-wise).

You bring up the part I'm always bothered by with the rich people complaining that the current tax code doesn't tax them their own fair share.

The Treasury Department is more than happy to accept above and beyond your current tax liabilities.

But it's not tax deductible.

Bad headline. The "trick" is not a trick, it is allowed under the current law. Should read, had the headline been written by an objective journalist, "Obama presses to close corporate tax loophole."
I would even say that referring to it as a loophole is not fair.

"Obama presses to reform badly written corporate tax laws."

Actually, the US government is behaving very rationally. Realizing the pressure on the US dollar, especially since progress is already happening in moving to SDRs (special drawing rights) as the world's reserve "currency" and trading blocs are increasingly using their own currency for bilateral trade.

President Clinton signed a bill that confiscates part of someone's net worth over a threshold for renouncing US citizenship and moving to another country. Bush and Obama are taking similar steps to keep assets in the USA. While it is reasonable to go after money laundering, it is becoming increasing difficult to do some business transactions internationally, open bank accounts in countries where one spends a lot of time on vacation or has residency, etc.

I feel compelled to bring up, as a public service, that 'patriotism' has nothing to do with one's government, and using it in an attempt to manipulate people into financing more and more mass murder is disingenuous and disgusting.
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Wait, US corporations are moving to Europe for lower taxes? I thought taxes there had to be extraordinarily high to support their free healthcare systems, paid maternity/paternity leave, and lengthy vacations?!

On a serious note, I wish articles like this actually gave some mechanics about the actual 'tax evasion'. The issue is that the US taxes worldwide earnings at the US tax rate. Other countries, such as the UK[1] don't do this. So if you're a multinational with sizable non-US earnings, it makes a lot of sense not to be domiciled in the US.

[1] https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachm...

I believe you answered your own non-serious question.

If the foreign nation only taxes the company for profit inside the nation and the US taxes profit worldwide, then it isn't too hard to see the better deal even if the foreign nation's tax rate is higher.

The UK corporate tax rate is lower, 21% vs 35% in the US.