June 2, 2011
Twelve big U.S. companies paid far less than  the statutory corporate tax rate from 2008 to 2010, despite making substantial  profits in that period, said a report released on Wednesday.With the Obama administration drafting a corporate tax reform plan, the  report found General Electric Co, American Electric Power Co Inc, DuPont Co and  nine other companies had a negative 1.5 percent tax rate on $171 billion in  profits over the three years studied.
"Not a single one of these companies paid anything close to the 35 percent  statutory tax rate," said the report from Citizens for Tax Justice, a  left-leaning group based in Washington that promised more details later this  year.
The White House and Congress are considering an overhaul of the corporate tax  system as a partial solution to the federal deficit, projected to hit $1.4  trillion this year.
Critics say tax loopholes promoted by corporate lobbyists and enacted by  Congress are to blame for a system that lets companies avoid taxes, usually in  perfectly legal ways.
Some business leaders have said they could live with closing some of these  loopholes, but in return, they have said they want the statutory tax rate  lowered. It is among the highest rates in the industrialized world.
Both President Barack Obama and Republicans want to trim the rate. Obama has  said he wants to end enough corporate tax breaks to compensate for the revenue  that would be lost from a lower rate. Republicans have blasted that as "tax  hikes."
The Business Roundtable, a lobbying group for corporate CEOs, issued a report  in April that said U.S.-based companies faced an average effective tax rate of  27.7 percent in the 2006-2009 period, more than their non-U.S. competitors.
The debate promises to go on for months and possibly years. U.S. Treasury  Secretary Timothy Geithner last week predicted movement on tax reform later in  2011.
Citizens for Tax Justice produced a report in the 1980s that helped lead to  President Ronald Reagan's landmark 1986 tax reforms. Since then, the tax code  has become riddled with exemptions, deferrals and other special breaks.
Companies singled out in Citizens for Tax Justice's newest report also  included Verizon Communications, Boeing Co, Wells Fargo & Co, FedEx Corp and  Exxon Mobil Corp.
'TIP OF ICEBERG'
"These 12 companies are just the tip of the iceberg of widespread corporate  tax avoidance," said Bob McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice, which  is working on a broader report covering the Fortune 500 companies.
Elected officials should make "reducing or eliminating the vast array of  corporate tax subsidies the centerpiece of any deficit-reduction strategy," he  said.
GE spokesman Andrew Williams said the company is "fully compliant with all  tax laws. There are no exceptions."
He said GE's 2010 tax rate was low because the company lost billions of  dollars in GE Capital, its financial arm, as a result of the global financial  crisis. "GE's tax rate will be much higher in 2011 as GE Capital recovers," he  said.
Citizens for Tax Justice said that in the 2008-2010 period, 10 of the dozen  companies studied enjoyed at least one year in which they were profitable, but  paid no taxes.
Exxon Mobil had a 14.2 percent effective tax rate over the 3-year period, the  highest of the 12 companies cited in the report, according to the group.
Exxon Mobil spokesman Alan Jeffers said, "Our effective tax rate in this  country over the past six years has averaged about 32 percent. Last year our  total taxes and duties to the U.S. government were $9.8 billion, which includes  an income tax expense of $1.8 billion."
American Electric Power and DuPont did not respond to requests for comment.  DuPont effectively paid $258 million in taxes in the first quarter of 2011, a  15.2 percent tax rate.
(Additional reporting by Matthew Daily and Ernest Scheyder in New York, Anna  Driver in Houston, Scott Malone in Boston; Editing by Richard Chang)
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