A study released
Friday [Jan. 13] by the Government Accountability Office found that more than a third of
large, profitable corporations in the United States paid nothing in federal
income taxes in 2018, the year the regressive Trump-GOP tax cuts took effect.
The GAO analysis, commissioned by Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.), showed that "average effective tax rates—the percentage
of income paid after tax breaks—among profitable large corporations fell from
16% in 2014 to 9% in 2018."
According to the
GAO, the share of profitable large corporations that owed $0 in federal income
taxes after credits rose from around 22% in 2014 to 34% in 2018.
"Each year
from 2014-2018, about half of large corporations and a quarter of profitable
ones didn't owe federal taxes," the GAO noted. "For example,
profitable corporations may not owe taxes due to prior years' losses."
The Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act, which former President Donald Trump signed into law in
December 2017, slashed the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21% and authorized a
slew of other giveaways that made
it easier for large businesses and wealthy individuals to lower their tax
bills.
"While House
Republicans want to make huge cuts to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid
because of their 'serious concern' about the deficit, they voted to provide
over a trillion dollars in tax breaks to large corporations and the top one
percent," Sanders said in a statement
Friday. "The situation has become so absurd that over a third of the
largest and most profitable corporations in our country pay nothing in federal
income taxes."
"Instead of
cutting vital and popular programs like Social Security and Medicare," the
senator added, "we need to repeal the Trump tax breaks for the rich and
demand that the largest corporations in America finally start paying their fair
share of taxes."
The GAO report
doesn't name the specific companies that paid nothing in federal income taxes
over the period the federal agency examined.
But separate
analyses from outside organizations such as the Institute on Taxation and Economic
Policy (ITEP) have identified such corporations. In 2021, ITEP
found that at least 55 large U.S. corporations including Nike, FedEx, HP, and
Kinder Morgan paid $0 in federal taxes on 2020 profits.
Steve Wamhoff,
ITEP's federal policy director, wrote in a blog post on Friday
that the GAO's new study confirms that "the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was an
unprecedented gift to corporations."'
"What the GAO
report really demonstrates is that no matter how you measure the federal
corporate income tax, not much of it has been paid in recent years, and the
2017 tax law has brought it to a new low," Wamhoff added. "The
corporate minimum tax enacted as part of the Inflation Reduction Act will help
address this problem. But as ITEP has explained, another key
step for Congress is to implement the international corporate minimum tax that
the Biden administration negotiated with other governments, and which is
designed to address the offshore tax dodging that will otherwise be very
difficult to resolve."
Sanders, for his
part, pointed to 2021 legislation he introduced alongside
Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) that "would have restored the pre-Trump
corporate tax rate of 35% and comprehensively shut down offshore corporate tax
avoidance."
"The
provisions in this bill to close offshore loopholes alone could raise over $1
trillion in revenue from multinational companies over the next decade,"
Sanders' office noted in a press release Friday.
The legislation,
formally titled the Corporate Tax Dodging Prevention Act, never received a vote
in the Senate or the House.
-Jake Johnson,
Common Dreams
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