Reform tax code to stop US companies keeping cash in offshore accounts

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

The United States doesn’t have a lot of standing to criticize Europeans for cracking down on Apple’s tax shenanigans in Ireland.

The United States doesn’t have a lot of standing to criticize Europeans for cracking down on Apple’s tax shenanigans in Ireland.

If anything, the European Commission’s finding that Apple owes more than $14 billion in taxes should push the U.S. to fix its own tax policies, under which its biggest companies stash most of their cash overseas to avoid domestic taxes.

As highlighted by the presidential election, globalization and its negative effects on the U.S. are a concern across party lines. Lack of funds for infrastructure and the deficit also are pressing issues.

Those problems are exacerbated when America’s largest and most profitable companies reduce their contributions and use accounting schemes that shift money to little countries offering special tax breaks.

You can’t begrudge companies for pursuing options made available to them by policymakers.

But the disproportionate benefits they’ve received and the influence they wield over those policymakers feed the growing cynicism about international trade. Fixing this tax problem is necessary to begin restoring faith in the benefits of globalization.

The U.S. fretted that the European Commission crackdowns on Apple and others are a departure from standard practice and will “undermine the multilateral progress made towards reducing tax avoidance.”

Given the glacial pace of that progress, and the unacceptable status quo, one might be glad the Europeans are shaking things up and being more assertive. That should push the next U.S. president and Congress to expedite tax reform in 2017.

This is urgent. Apple’s case signals that other governments are closing loopholes and collecting taxes that have been evaded for years.

At stake are taxes on an accumulated $2 trillion that Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, big pharmaceutical companies and others earned and stashed in foreign countries.

If the U.S. continues dawdling on reforms as foreign countries tighten their rules, the U.S. will lose out. Companies get credit on their U.S. tax bill for taxes paid abroad, so it becomes a question of which country will collect, and how much. In other words: Taxes collected overseas are taxes the U.S. won’t get from its top-tier companies.

Since companies such as Apple and Microsoft owe much of their success to the schools and infrastructure in the U.S., where they are headquartered and do most of their product development, they should pay more U.S. taxes.

This is not about gouging companies. It’s about collecting what they owe — their fair share to support countries in which they operate. Reforms should level the playing field and eliminate elaborate breaks that pencil out for only the richest and most sophisticated companies. Taxes on foreign earnings shouldn’t be permanently deferrable.

As elected officials pursue reforms in the U.S., they should also resist pressure to give Apple and others a sweetheart deal to repatriate foreign earnings and finally pay U.S. taxes on them. These companies have been getting sweet deals for years.

Fixing this problem would benefit everyone. Shareholders and global companies would get more certainty, taxpayers would see more fairness and the U.S. would have better standing, more revenue and a stronger defense of globalization’s positive effects.

— The Seattle Times