Over a four years period from 2008 to 2011, Corning Inc. was one of 26 companies that
managed to avoid paying any American income taxes, even though it
earned nearly $3 billion during that time. In fact, according to
Citizens For Tax Justice, the company received a $4 million refund from
2008 to 2010. That didn’t stop Susan Ford, a senior executive at the
company, from telling the House Ways and Means Committee this week that
America’s high corporate tax rate was putting her company at a disadvantage:
American manufacturers are at a distinct disadvantage to competitors headquartered in other countries. Specifically, foreign manufacturers uniformly face a lower corporate tax rate than U.S. manufacturers, and virtually all operate under territorial systems which encourage investment both abroad and at home.
Ford
told the committee that Corning paid an effective tax rate of 36
percent in 2011, but as CTJ notes, she is counting taxes on profits
earned overseas that haven’t yet been paid and won’t be unless the
company decides to bring the money back to the United States. Corning’s
actual tax rate in 2011, according to CTJ’s analysis, was actually negative 0.2 percent.
The territorial system Ford testified in favor of would actually encourage the offshoring of profits earned
by American companies, thereby reducing the amount they pay in taxes
even more. And rather than helping remove a disadvantage that prevents
companies from creating jobs, an economic analysis of such a tax system
found that it could actually cost the United States as many as 800,000 jobs. READ MORE
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