Picking Up the Tab 2015 Small Businesses Pay the Price for Offshore Tax Havens Education Picking Up the Tab 2015 Small Businesses Pay the Price for Offshore Tax Havens Jaimie Woo and Dan Smith Education Fund April 2015 Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank the following individuals who contributed information and thoughtful editorial and research support for this report: Scott Klinger, Director of Revenue and Spending Policies for the Center for Effective Government; Tom Van Heeke, Policy Analyst at Frontier Group; Richard Phillips, Policy Analyst at Citizens for Tax Justice; as well as Phineas Baxandall and Stuart Fraser from U.S. PIRG. Thanks also to Matthew Gardner, Executive Director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy; Heather Lowe, Legal Counsel and Director of Government Affairs for Global Financial Integrity; and Rebecca Wilkins, Executive Director of the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency (FACT) Coalition for providing additional perspectives and information to previous versions of the report. Finally, thank you also to Abigail Caplovitz Field, Nicole Tichon, and Corey Teeter, who contributed to previous versions of this report as researchers or authors. The authors bear any responsibility for factual errors. The recommendations are those of TexPIRG Education Fund. The views expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of our funders or those who provided review. Copyright 2015 TexPIRG Education Fund. TexPIRG Education Fund advocates for the public interest and works to protect consumers and promote good government. We investigate problems, craft solutions, educate the public, and offer meaningful opportunities for civic participation. With a strong network of researchers, advocates, organizers and students in state capitals across the country, we take on the special interests on issues such as product safety, public health, political corruption, tax and budget reform and consumer protection, where these interests stand in the way of reform and progress. Visit us online at www.texpirgedfund.org. Cover Photos: Olivier Le Moal/Bigstock and JLV Image Works/Bigstock Layout: Alec Meltzer, www.meltzerdesign.net Table of Contents Executive Summary.......................................................................... 1 Introduction..................................................................................... 4 Corporations Use Offshore Tax Havens to Avoid Taxes....................... 6 Offshore Tax Havens Cost American Small Business Owners Billions......................................................... 9 American Small Business Owners Want to Stop Offshore Tax Haven Abuse.................................................. 12 Closing Offshore Tax Loopholes Would Level the Playing Field for Small Business and Recapture Lost Revenue........................................................... 15 Methodology.................................................................................. 17 Appendix A: Impact of Offshore Tax Haven Abuse on Small Businesses............................................................. 20 Notes............................................................................................. 22 Executive Summary Every year, corporations and wealthy individuals use complicated gimmicks to shift U.S. earnings to subsidiaries in offshore tax havens – countries with minimal or no taxes – in order to reduce their federal and state income tax liabilities by billions of dollars. While tax haven abusers benefit from America’s markets, public infrastructure, educated workforce, security and rule of law – all supported in one way or another by tax dollars – they continue to avoid paying for these benefits. Small business owners are hit twice by the effects of tax dodging by large multinational corporations. Since they almost never have the kind of subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands or armies of tax lawyers and accountants to exploit tax haven loopholes that their multinational rivals do, small businesses are routinely placed at a competitive disadvantage in the market place. In addition, small businesses, like average taxpayers, end up picking up the tab for offshore tax avoidance in the form of higher taxes, cuts to public services, or increases to the federal debt. In this report, four small business owners share why offshore tax haven abuse matters to them in their states. This study examines the potential impact of corporate tax dodging on America’s small businesses. The United States loses approximately $110 billion in federal and state revenue each year due to corporations using tax havens to dodge taxes. In considering the impact of tax haven abuse, it is not possible to determine what portion of the lost revenue gets absorbed by program cuts or additional debt, but the analysis in this report shows the extent that tax responsibilities would be shifted in each state if the rest of the business sector picked up the tab – divided equally among the small businesses. Each small business would need to pay an average of $3,244 in additional taxes if they were to pick up the full tab for income lost to corporations exploiting tax havens. • Corporate tax haven abuse costs the federal government $90 billion in lost tax revenue. Every small business would need to pay an additional $2,684 in federal taxes to account for the revenue lost. • Corporate tax haven abuse costs state governments an estimated $20 billion in lost tax revenue. Every small business would need to pay an additional $560 in state taxes to account for the revenue lost. Most of America’s biggest companies use tax havens to avoid tax obligations in the United States, including many that have taken advantage of government bailouts or rely on government contracts. At least 362 companies, making up 72 percent of the Fortune 500, maintained subsidiaries in tax haven jurisdictions as of 2013.1 • Pfizer, the world’s largest drug maker, paid no U.S. income taxes between 2010 and 2012 despite earning $43 billion world- Picking Up the Tab 2015 1 Figure ES-1. Picking Up the Tab: The Average Amount Small Business Owners in Each State Would Need to Pay to Make Up For State and Federal Revenue Lost To Offshore Tax Havens $2,116 $419 $1,432 $580 $605 $740 $3,547 $1,899 $10,770 $2,213 $3,165 $390 $3,595 $1,026 $11,351 $1,496 $487 $558 $1,223 $1,509 $1,721 $4,570 $2,118 $3,075 $3,622 $5,024 $3,547 $2,421 $2,898 $1,768 $2,806 $8,202 $819 $4,294 $4,031 $9,838 $6,933 $7,298 $15,843 $1,599 $5,591 (D.C.) $2,616 $1,035 $2,928 $727 $1,014 $3,104 $1,039 $1,052 $811 $711 wide. In fact, the corporation received more than $2 billion in federal tax refunds. In 2014, Pfizer operated 143 subsidiaries in tax haven countries and had $74 billion offshore and out of the reach of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). • Microsoft maintains five tax haven subsidiaries and stashed $92.9 billion overseas in 2014. If Microsoft had not booked these 2 Picking Up the Tab 2015 $350-$799 $800-$1,499 $1,500-$2,999 $3,000-$4,999 More than $5000 profits offshore, they would have owed an additional $29.6 billion in taxes. • Citigroup, bailed out by taxpayers in the wake of the financial crisis of 2008, maintained 41 subsidiaries in tax haven countries in 2014, and kept $43.8 billion in offshore jurisdictions. If that money had not been booked offshore, Citigroup would have owed an additional $11.6 billion in taxes. To restore fairness to the tax system, decision makers should end incentives for companies to book their income to offshore tax havens, close the most egregious loopholes, and increase transparency. • End the ability of multinational corporations to indefinitely defer paying taxes on the profits they attribute to their foreign entities. • Reject a “territorial” tax system, which would allow companies to temporarily shift profits to tax haven countries, pay minimal tax under those countries’ laws, and then bring the profits back to the United States tax-free. • Put an end to the “check-the-box” rule, which currently allows multinational companies to make inconsistent claims about their corporate status. To maximize their tax advantage, corporations can currently tell one country that they are one type of entity while telling another country that the same entity is something else entirely. • Stop companies from deducting interest expenses from their U.S. tax liability when that interest is paid to a foreign affiliate, a practice known as a form of “earnings stripping” that makes U.S. income appear to disappear. • Shrink the ability for corporations to invert, or merge with an oftentimes smaller foreign entity and artificially re-designate their headquarters abroad to lower their tax bill. • Reduce the incentive for corporations to license intellectual property (for example, patents and trademarks) to shell companies in tax haven countries before paying inflated – and tax-deductible – fees to use them in the United States. • Treat the profits of publicly traded “foreign” corporations that are managed and controlled in the United States as domestic corporations for income tax purposes. • Require multinational corporations to report their profits with a list of how their other profits were designated to each other nation, also known as “country by country reporting.” • Equip the Department of Treasury with the enforcement power it needs to stop tax haven countries and their financial institutions from impeding tax collection in the United States. • Require all companies to disclose their tax liability on their untaxed foreign profits – 55 of the Fortune 500 companies already do so, while the rest maintain it is not possible to calculate this number2. Picking Up the Tab 2015 3 Introduction If you saw the Ugland House, a modest fivestory office building in the Cayman Islands, for the first time, you would probably be surprised to learn that it is registered address for 18,857 companies.3 The Cayman Islands, like many other offshore tax havens, levies no income taxes on companies incorporated there. Simply by registering subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands, U.S. companies can legally shift much of their U.S.-earned profits to the Caymans and pay no tax on them. They are able to do this because the U.S. corporate tax system allows companies to defer paying U.S. taxes on profits they earn abroad, until they declare the money has been brought back to the United States by paying dividends to shareholders, repurchasing stock, or making U.S. investments. Many U.S. companies game this system by using loopholes that let them disguise profits legitimately made in the U.S. as “foreign” profits earned by a subsidiary in a tax haven. The vast majority of subsidiaries registered at Ugland House have no physical presence, products, or employees in the Caymans other than a mere post office box. About half of these companies even maintain their billing address in the U.S.4 This unabashedly false corporate “presence” is one of the hallmarks of a tax haven. Tax havens are countries or jurisdictions with very low or nonexistent taxes, to which U.S.based multinational firms transfer their reported earnings to avoid paying taxes in the United States. These companies then use a variety 4 Picking Up the Tab 2015 of strategies to bring the money back to the United States nearly tax-free.5 Many tax haven countries are small island nations, such as Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, and the Cayman Islands.6 Most tax haven countries also have financial secrecy laws that create barriers to disclosure about financial transactions made in their jurisdiction. While decision makers at the state and federal level grapple with how to bridge budget gaps and plan for America’s future, closing tax haven loopholes represents a way to reduce the deficit, make the tax system fairer, and avoid raising tax rates. Over ten years, the $90 billion in annual revenue lost from the corporate abuse of offshore tax havens could be used to forestall increased national debt, higher across the board tax rates, or cuts to important public priorities, like badly needed infrastructure and education funding. It makes sense for profits earned in America to be subject to U.S. taxation. The profits generally depend on access to America’s largest-inthe-world consumer market7, a well-educated workforce trained by our school systems, our strong private property rights enforced by America’s court system, and American transportation networks to bring products to market. Multinational companies that depend on America’s economic, physical, and social infrastructure are shirking their duty to pay for it if they “shelter” the resulting profits overseas. When tax havens are used this way, other Americans are forced to shoulder the burden. 18,857 companies register their address in this small office building in the Cayman Islands. Small business owners, along with ordinary Americans, pick up the tab either by paying higher taxes, suffering from cuts to public programs, or facing a larger national debt. And without access to offshore subsidiaries, small businesses and medium-sized domestic businesses are put at an unfair competitive disadvantage and forced to compete on an uneven playing field. It’s no wonder that the small business community shows strong support for closing corporate tax loopholes. An independent scientific poll found that 90 percent of small business owners believe big corporations use loopholes to avoid taxes that small businesses have to pay, and 92 percent agree it’s a problem when “U.S. multinational corporations use accounting loopholes to shift their U.S. profits to their offshore subsidiaries to avoid taxes.”8 This report focuses on the impact of offshore tax haven abuse on small businesses and offers some solutions to solve these problems. The study is our fifth annual report illustrating how much more small business owners would need to pay each year to make up for the estimated $110 billion in federal and state tax revenue lost due to the corporate abuse of tax havens. While previous editions of this report documented the additional burden individual taxpayers would have to bear to make up for tax haven abuse, this edition focuses on the effects on small business owners. Picking Up the Tab 2015 5 Corporations Use Offshore Tax Havens to Avoid Taxes Worldwide, approximately $2.1 trillion is held offshore according to securities filings compiled by Bloomberg and the U.S. Office of Management and Budget in 2015.9 Much of these profits get booked in tax havens – countries or jurisdictions with very low or nonexistent taxes in often small island nations like Bermuda, the Cayman Islands and Seychelles – to which firms transfer their earnings to avoid paying taxes in the United States.10 Income held overseas by foreign subsidiaries of U.S.based companies is not taxed until the money is declared as returned to the United States, used for stock repurchases, paid in dividends to shareholders, or invested back in the U.S. Even then, many companies and individuals still find ways to dodge their tax obligations, either by taking advantage of tax holidays or using complicated accounting schemes and intermediate countries.11 Even though companies are not required to disclose how much of its profits are booked to tax havens, there is ample evidence of the widespread use of tax havens by American multinationals. An investigation by the Congressional Research Service found that in 2008, American multinational companies reported 43 percent of their foreign earnings in just five small tax havens countries. Yet these countries accounted for only 4 percent of the companies’ foreign workforce and just 7 percent of their foreign investment. That same year, the amount of profit U.S. multinational corporations reported earning in Bermuda and Luxembourg 6 Picking Up the Tab 2015 – two tax havens – equaled 1,000 percent and 208 percent of those countries’ entire economic output, respectively.12 That’s not possible, of course, but it reveals the accounting and legal fictions in the booking of profits to tax havens. Corporate Profits Held “Offshore” Often Remain in the United States Ironically, much of the money corporations stash offshore may actually be deposited in U.S. banks, using special accounts called “international banking facilities.” The banks can lend this money overseas and earn profit on it. The money continues to be considered held offshore and not returned to the United States even though the cash may be in these special U.S. bank accounts with the benefits of the law and the stability of the U.S. banking system. A study of large U.S. multinational corporations by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that nearly half of the profits considered “offshore” for tax purposes were actually in bank accounts or investments in the United States, allowing these corporations to benefit from the stability of the U.S. financial system without paying the taxes that support it.13 With their armies of tax lawyers and accounting specialists, companies have many strategies for shifting profits offshore. Corporations may transfer their patents or trademarks to subsid- iaries located in tax havens and spend their domestically earned income to pay tax-deductible royalties to the subsidiary to use the patents or trademarks in America. Other companies engage in forms of “earnings stripping,” such as when companies in the United States borrow money from subsidiaries in a tax haven and then deduct their interest payments from their taxable income. The majority of America’s largest publicly held corporations avoid paying taxes through the use of offshore havens. According to an earlier U.S. PIRG Education Fund and Citizens for Tax Justice Study, at least 362 companies, making up 72 percent of the Fortune 500, maintained subsidiaries in tax haven jurisdictions as of 2013.14 Companies that consistently rank high both for the number of tax haven subsidiaries they maintain and for how much of their profits they book offshore for tax purposes include:15 • Citigroup, maintained 41 subsidiaries in tax haven countries in 2014, and kept $43.8 billion in offshore jurisdictions. If that money had been repatriated, or brought back to the U.S., Citigroup would have owed an additional $11.6 billion in taxes. • Pfizer, the world’s largest drug maker, paid no U.S. income taxes between 2010 and 2012 because the company reported losses in the U.S. in those years, despite making 40 percent of its sales in the U.S. and earning $43 billion worldwide. In fact, the corporation received more than $2 billion in federal tax refunds.16 Pfizer pulls this off by using accounting gimmicks to book its taxable profits offshore. The company licenses patents for its drugs to its subsidiaries in low or zero-tax countries before using its U.S.-based operation to pay high – tax deductible – licensing fees to those subsidiaries to use the patent. In 2014, Pfizer operated 143 subsidiaries in tax haven countries and declared $74 billion offshore and out of the reach of the Internal Revenue Service. • Caterpillar, a manufacturer of construction equipment and engines, deferred or avoided $2.4 billion in U.S. taxes between 2000 and 2012 by shifting $8 billion in profits to a Swiss subsidiary, which was awarded a special corporate tax rate of just four to six percent in negotiations between Caterpillar and the Swiss government.17 In 2014, Caterpillar operated a total of 71 subsidiaries in foreign countries and kept $17.2 billion offshore. • Google uses tax tricks with nicknames such as the “Double Irish” and the “Dutch Sandwich” to shift its profits through subsidiaries in countries including Ireland and Bermuda and the Netherlands. These techniques helped reduce the company’s tax bill by $3.1 billion between 2008 and 2010 to achieve an effective tax rate of just 2.4 percent on its overseas profits.18 In 2014, Google declared $47.4 billion as sitting offshore. • General Electric maintained 18 tax haven subsidiaries in 2014 and parked $119 billion offshore. With the help of offshore subsidiaries, General Electric paid a federal effective tax rate of -7.3 percent between 2008 and 2014 despite being highly profitable all of those years. GE’s tax rate was negative during that period because the company received money back from the U.S. government even though it reported billions of dollars of U.S. profit.19 Picking Up the Tab 2015 7 • Microsoft maintains five tax haven subsidiaries and reported a total of $92.9 billion overseas in its 2014 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. If this money had not been shifted offshore, Microsoft would have owed an additional $29.6 billion in taxes. • Bank of America declared operating 21 subsidiaries in 2014, a peculiar drop from its declared 257 subsidiaries in tax havens in 2013, which might reflect the Security and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) lax disclosure standards pertaining to subsid- 8 Picking Up the Tab 2015 iaries. It kept $17.2 billion offshore. If the money had not been shifted offshore, Bank of America would have owed an additional $4.5 billion in taxes. Ironically, many firms that go to great lengths to avoid paying federal taxes also derive a large portion of their business from contracts with the federal government. In 2007, the Government Accountability Office calculated that 63 of the 100 largest publicly traded U.S. federal contractors had subsidiaries in tax haven countries or countries with sweeping financial secrecy laws.20 Offshore Tax Havens Cost American Small Business Owners Billions Offshore tax haven abuse impacts both federal and state budgets. States calculate taxes based largely on federally-defined income for the sake of simplicity and to reduce the cost of enforcement and compliance.21 This means that when corporations do not report income to the federal government, that income typically also goes unreported to states that levy a corporate income tax, too. By booking income to tax haven countries, corporations unfairly deprive the United States of approximately $90 billion in federal tax revenue and $20 billion in state tax revenue.22 At Figure 1. Picking Up the Tab: The Average Amount Small Business Owners in Each State Would Need to Pay to Make Up For State and Federal Revenue Lost To Offshore Tax Havens24 $2,116 $419 $1,432 $580 $605 $740 $3,547 $1,899 $10,770 $2,213 $3,165 $390 $3,595 $1,026 $11,351 $1,496 $487 $558 $1,223 $1,509 $1,721 $4,570 $2,118 $3,075 $3,622 $5,024 $3,547 $2,421 $2,898 $1,768 $2,806 $8,202 $819 $4,294 $4,031 $9,838 $6,933 $7,298 $15,843 $1,599 $5,591 (D.C.) $2,616 $1,035 $2,928 $727 $1,014 $3,104 $1,039 $1,052 $811 $711 $350-$799 $800-$1,499 $1,500-$2,999 $3,000-$4,999 More than $5000 Picking Up the Tab 2015 9 both the federal and state level, tax dodging can have an especially large impact on budgets. Given that most states are subject to balanced budget requirements, the impacts of state revenue losses are necessarily more immediate because states cannot take on more debt to cover the shortfall.23 Americans will either pay more in state taxes or endure cutbacks to state spending on services and infrastructure. On average, each small business would need to pay an additional $3,244 on its taxes if they were to collectively bear the full cost of compensating for combined federal and state corporate tax revenue lost to tax havens. The combined tax obligation on small businesses would vary depending on the business’ home state based on differing average tax contributions to the Federal Treasury from each state (See Figure 1 and Appendix A). Without the aid of armies of tax lawyers and accountants that large corporations employ to help them dodge their tax obligations, America’s small businesses pay what they owe and, consequently, must help pick up the tab when major companies abuse offshore tax havens.25 If America’s small businesses were to fully account for the federal corporate tax revenue lost to tax havens in 2014 – approximately $90 billion – each small business would pay, on average, an additional $2,684 in federal corporate income tax (See Appendix A). Small businesses in Delaware would pay the most in additional federal-level taxes, paying, on average, an extra $12,472 (See Table 1). Focusing on just on state revenues lost to offshore tax haven abuse, which amounts to approximately $20 billion, each small business would pay an average of an additional $560 in state business taxes (see Appendix A). Small businesses in Delaware would pay the most in additional state-level taxes, paying, on average, an extra $3,370 (see Table 1). Table 1. Additional Federal and State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business, Top 10 States State 10 Additional Combined Federal and State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Additional Federal Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Additional State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Delaware $15,843 $12,472 $3,370 Nebraska $11,351 $9,150 $2,201 Minnesota $10,770 $8,237 $2,533 Rhode Island $9,838 $8,104 $1,734 Arkansas $8,202 $6,848 $1,354 New Jersey $7,298 $5,700 $1,598 Connecticut $6,933 $5,635 $1,298 District of Columbia $5,591 $4,321 $1,270 Missouri $5,024 $4,223 $801 Illinois $4,570 $3,689 $880 Picking Up the Tab 2015 Tax Repatriation Holidays Are Not a Solution Tax repatriation holidays allow companies to bring profits booked offshore back to the United States at a greatly reduced – and supposedly temporary – tax rate. Such holidays are attractive to companies using tax havens because it is usually challenging to return offshored profits to the United States without paying taxes, which companies must do if they want to distribute earnings to their shareholders. Multinational corporations and their lobbyists seek to portray tax holidays as a win-win-win for companies, everyday Americans, and government budgets. They claim that repatriation brings money back to the United States so it can be invested in ways that create new jobs, and potentially provides an immediate, albeit small, bump in tax revenue for the government. While allowing companies to bring back their profits at a reduced rate might produce temporary revenue, the long-term negative effects of a tax holiday ultimately undermine the ability to invest in public priorities by incentivizing companies to continue shifting their profits offshore. Experience suggests that companies repatriating profits do not necessarily use those funds to make productive investments in the U.S. economy. A 2004 tax holiday that allowed corporations to return foreign profits to the United States at a nominal rate of 5.25 percent, versus the statutory corporate income tax rate of 35 percent, led to the repatriation of $362 billion in corporate money. Unfortunately, the repatriating companies used much of that money to fund stock buybacks rather than investment that spurred new job creation.26 The United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations – a part of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs – also found that the 15 firms that repatriated the most money that year – approximately $150 billion collectively – actually shed nearly 21,000 jobs, while increasing executive pay and slightly decreasing investment in research and development.27 The Joint Committee on Taxation, Congress’s nonpartisan tax scorekeeper, estimates that enacting another similar tax holiday would cost the United States nearly $96 billion in lost tax revenue over the next 10 years.28 Picking Up the Tab 2015 11 American Small Business Owners Want to Stop Offshore Tax Haven Abuse Unsurprisingly, public opinion surveys find that average Americans show little tolerance for corporate abuse of tax havens. According to an April 2015 poll from the independent and nonpartisan research and polling non-profit organization, Pew Research Center, Americans’ top complaint about the tax system is not the amount that they pay in taxes, but rather, 64 percent say they are “bothered a lot by the feeling that some corporations do not pay their fair share of taxes.”29 Likewise, a January 2013 Hart Research Poll found that 73 percent of Americans agree that we should “close loopholes allowing corporations and the wealthy to avoid U.S. taxes by shifting income overseas.” The same poll found that 83 percent of Americans agreed that we should “increase [the] tax on U.S. corporations’ overseas profits to ensure it is as much as [the] tax on their U.S. profits.” This was the most popular policy of the 12 choices that were included in the poll.30 The small business community shows similarly strong support for measures to close offshore tax loopholes and is similarly frustrated by the gimmicks corporations use to game the system. Businesses should thrive based on the quality of their products and the strengths of their busi- 12 Picking Up the Tab 2015 ness model, but tax haven abuse turns this on its head. Ordinary small businesses suffer when they must compete on an uneven playing field against corporations that avoid paying their fair share in taxes by employing high-priced lawyers, accountants and lobbyists. According to a 2012 survey, sponsored by the American Sustainable Business Council, Main Street Alliance, and Small Business Majority, three leading small business organizations representing hundreds of thousands of small business owners in the U.S., 90 percent of small business owners believe big corporations use loopholes to avoid taxes that small businesses have to pay, and 92 percent think that it is a problem when “U.S. multinational corporations use accounting loopholes to shift their U.S. profits to their offshore subsidiaries to avoid taxes.”31 A 2013 poll found that, when asked what Congress’ top budget priority should be, one-third of small businesses chose “closing tax loopholes for large corporations” – twice as many as chose the second most popular priority.32 In particular, 64 percent of small business owners support ending the ability of corporations to defer paying U.S. taxes indefinitely on income booked overseas, and an overwhelming 85 percent are opposed to instituting a territorial tax system.33 Small Business Owners Share Why This Matters The following is a letter written by Marlene Nuechterlien, owner of Caboodle Gifts, in Denver, Colorado. I own a small business – technically an LLC – with my husband in Denver. It’s called Caboodle Gifts, and we offer unique, handcrafted and upcycled gifts that are locally made as well as classes that are fun for all ages.  I run the store – we have no other employees.  As you can probably guess, it’s a lot of work. As a small business owner, I pay my taxes. This is a sizeable chunk of money, too.  I must plan for it, so I’m ready and able to pay when the tax bill comes.  Though I do pay a lot in taxes, I’m happy with what they are paying for. As a culture, we pay taxes to make a better living environment for all – from a good education system that develops a good workforce, to a safe and efficient infrastructure.  It is unfair that huge corporations – the big guys that already have every advantage over small businesses — are avoiding their taxes by using offshore tax havens. It is unfair that while we’re all paying back into the system that gave us our profits, they are not. They benefit just as much off of the public goods our taxes pay for. These tax loopholes need to be closed to not only restore fairness in our tax code, but to also help out Colorado and the rest of our country by putting more funding into our infrastructure, watersheds, schools, health care, and more. George Street Camera is a camera and framing shop in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and is owned by A.G. Ritter. He has four employees and has been in business for 33 years. In an interview with Mr. Ritter, he expressed that he has no problem with paying taxes because the “reality of doing business in society necessitates funding for highways, roads, and other services.” He believes that everyone “needs to do their fair share,” and attributes the complexity of our tax system to the pervasiveness of corporate tax loopholes. Ritter’s niche has been shrinking with the rise of digital photography and mail order purchasing, and he explained that corporate tax loopholes represent yet another unfair advantage that large manufacturer leverages against small businesses. Picking Up the Tab 2015 13 Jeff Schorr is the owner of Craftsman House, an art gallery built in 1918 that showcases American craft artwork from over 300 local and national artists, in St. Petersburg, Florida. When talking about what inspired him to start his business roughly ten years ago, Jeff shared, “I had the idea for awhile about creating an art gallery with a homey feel – one with a café, and one that combined my passion for arts, good food, music, and most importantly, community.” He describes the last ten years as challenging, but underscores the importance of the taxes that he pays: “I understand that my taxes are a necessity, as they pay for schools, roads, and infrastructure. I don’t mind paying my fair share, but it’s frustrating when others don’t. St. Petersburg is going through a bit of a Renaissance, with an economy that’s finally improving, and with a community that is more progressive and forward thinking. Taxes that fund our schools, police, and fire department, help support that.” Jeff also explained, “If these loopholes that allow tax haven abuse were closed, it would affect my business. As far as I know, I might still be paying the same, but there are certain sections of the city, such as the Warehouse Arts District, that need development – better sidewalks, lighting – that corporations need to help contribute to pay for.” Jeff talked about how he is put at a disadvantage by working on an unequal playing field with large corporations. Lora Fraracci is the owner of EarthMadeClean, which offers commercial and residential cleaning services with environmentally friendly and low-carbon chemicals, in Des Moines, Iowa. Lora opened EarthMadeClean in 2009; she shared, “Because we travels to our clients, we benefit from many of the public goods that our federal and state taxes pay for, such as roads and bridges.” Her business also depends on wealthier households that are able to spend money to have a cleaning service, which means that they need to have good schools and strong town infrastructure. Lora called state and federal taxes “daunting,” and emphatically explained, “When I hear that businesses are getting all of these breaks, and taking advantage of legal loopholes, it frustrates me because I don’t have that advantage. If the outlets are there to take, somebody will take them. If we don’t close these loopholes, people are going to continue taking advantage of them. If people or corporations don’t pay their taxes, it hurts our entire economy.” 14 Picking Up the Tab 2015 Closing Offshore Tax Loopholes Would Level the Playing Field for Small Business and Recapture Lost Revenue Decision makers should take strong action to prevent corporations from booking their income to offshore tax havens. In doing so, the United States can restore fairness to the tax system and recoup billions of dollars in both federal and state tax revenue – money that could be used to support squeezed state and federal spending priorities, to fund tax relief for working families and small businesses, or to pay down the national debt. To end offshore tax haven abuse, the United States should eliminate the incentives and mechanisms that exist to shift money overseas. • End the ability of multinational corporations to defer paying taxes indefinitely on the profits they book to their foreign entities. The foundation of offshore tax haven abuse is the legal provision that allows corporations to defer paying taxes on profits stashed overseas until they are repatriated to the United States. This feature of American tax law incentivizes the establishment of foreign subsidiaries for the purpose of housing corporate money out of reach of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The United States Senate’s Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that no longer permitting such deferral would raise nearly $600 billion over 10 years.34 Double taxation would not be a concern because companies can already deduct any taxes paid to foreign governments from their tax liability in the United States. • Reject a “territorial” tax system. Unlike in a “worldwide” tax system in which corporate income from around the globe is accounted for in calculating taxes, under a territorial tax system, countries only levy taxes based on the income that corporations decide to declare within their borders. Under current law, the United States employs features of both systems, allowing corporations to defer taxes on their foreign income as long as it remains declared overseas and imposing a levy once the money is repatriated. Territorial taxation would permanently exempt income booked overseas from American taxation, effectively establishing a permanent tax holiday for corporate profits booked offshore. Thus, a territorial tax system would exacerbate existing perverse incentives for corporations to shift profits abroad to dodge their U.S. tax obligations, while also encourage companies to move their operations wholesale to other countries to exploit these incentives. • Put an end to the “check the box” rule. The “check the box” rule allows U.S. companies to “check the box” on their tax forms when describing their various subsidiaries for tax purposes. When used by U.S.-based multinationals, the rule allows American corporations to strip profits out of high tax countries by checking the relevant box on their IRS tax form to transform a subsid- Picking Up the Tab 2015 15 iary into a “disregarded entity” – irrelevant for tax purposes. The Department of Treasury estimates that this one rule alone costs the federal government almost $10 billion in lost annual revenue.35 • Prevent corporations from deducting interest expenses paid to their own offshore affiliates. One “earnings stripping” mechanism is for U.S.-based parent companies to borrow money from their foreign subsidiaries and pay them interest, a taxdeductible expense. The interest income, in turn, may be taxed at low levels or not at all depending on local tax rates in the country where the foreign subsidiary is based. • End incentives for corporations to “invert”, or merge with an often smaller foreign entity and change its headquarters on paper to shrink their tax bill. By buying out a foreign company and using it as a tax haven, companies that “invert” don’t relocate abroad in any real sense. Burger King and Walgreen’s were two high profile companies that attempted to invert (of which Burger King did in fact invert), which would have added to more than 75 inverted companies since 1983. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that such defections could cost $20 billion over the next ten years.36 Oftentimes, inversions are coupled with earnings stripping, described above. • Reduce the incentive for corporations to license intellectual property to shell companies or other subsidiaries in tax haven countries. A common gimmick used by large corporations to dodge their tax liability is to license patents or trademarks or other forms of intellectual property to a shell corporation or other subsidiary located in a tax haven jurisdiction, and then pay heavily inflated – and tax-deductible – 16 Picking Up the Tab 2015 fees to use them in the United States. This can dramatically reduce a company’s taxable income in the United States and, in effect, transfer the money to a subsidiary facing few tax obligations in a country like Bermuda or the Cayman Islands. Imposing stricter transfer pricing rules with regard to intellectual property, as well as taxes on excess income generated by transferring property offshore, could reduce the incentive for corporations to license intellectual property to related entities at inflated prices. Offshore tax haven abuse is made easier by inadequate transparency in multinational corporate finance and lackluster enforcement of existing laws. Decision makers should strengthen the ability of the United States to crack down on offshore tax haven abuse by: • Requiring multinational corporations to report their profits, sales, employees, and those of their related subsidiaries on a country-by-country basis so it is clear to governments around the world where the money is actually earned. • Requiring all companies to disclose their tax liability on their untaxed foreign profits – 55 of the Fortune 500 companies already do so, while the rest maintain it is not possible to calculate this number. • Equipping the Department of Treasury and the IRS with the enforcement power it needs to stop tax haven countries and their financial institutions from impeding U.S. tax collection. • Implementing in full the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), passed by Congress in 2010. The law’s implementation has been slowed by multinational companies in a protracted stakeholder process. Methodology This report calculates the cost of corporate tax haven abuse for small businesses, in terms of both additional federal and state tax obligations. It hypothetically looks at how much more an average small business in each state would need to pay, if the full burden of offshore tax dodging was picked up by other corporate taxes and shouldered evenly among small business. To do this, we first needed to identify: 1) how many small businesses were in operation in the United States in 2014 by state; and 2) the total federal tax revenue from corporations lost to offshore havens; and 3) the gross collection of federal business income tax revenue by state. 1. Consistent with previous editions of this report, we defined a small business as one with fewer than 100 employees.37 This is both an intuitive definition and the one used by The Main Street Alliance and American Sustainable Business Council, both advocates for small business, when identifying samples for polling and surveys. The United States Census Bureau stores data on the number of small businesses. Consistent with previous editions of this report, we consulted its Statistics of U.S. Businesses division, downloading a dataset entitled “U.S. & States, NAICS Sectors, Small Employment Sizes,” available at www.census.gov/econ/susb/, accessed on 4 March 2015. This dataset contains information on the number of businesses in each state by employment size, allowing us to identify the number of businesses in each state with 1-99 employees. We also consulted Nonemployer Statistics, available at www.census.gov/econ/nonemployer/ and accessed on 4 March 2015, to identify the number of non-employer establishments – businesses with no paid employees but subject to federal income tax – by state. By adding these numbers together, we arrived at a figure for the total number of small businesses with fewer than 100 employees in the United States as a whole, and in each state. Note that for our small business calculations we use 2012 data, the most recent data available, and identified 33,537,500 small businesses in the United States. Note also that for the purposes of this report, we assumed that all small businesses identified had taxable income in 2014. 2. The federal revenue lost to offshore tax havens totals $150 billion, per United States Senate, Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Offshore Tax Evasion: The Effort to Collect Unpaid Taxes on Billions in Hidden Offshore Accounts, 26 February 2014. The portion of corporate federal revenue lost to offshore tax havens totals $90 billion, per Kimberly A. Clausing, “The Revenue Effects of Multinational Firm Income Shifting,” Tax Notes, 28 March 2011. We deduced that the portion of federal tax revenue lost to individuals’ use of offshore tax havens totals $60 billion from the previous two sources. That additional amount is not examined in this report. Picking Up the Tab 2015 17 3. Last year’s Internal Revenue Service’s (IRS) annual Data Book, a publication containing data on the previous year’s tax collections, reported the gross collection of federal business tax revenue by state in the United States. We consulted Table 5 in the IRS Data Book 2014, available at www.irs.gov/uac/SOI-Tax-Stats-IRS-Data-Book, to find that in 2014, the United States collected $353,141,112,000 in federal business income tax revenue. This table also reported the amount of revenue by state. may not sum to 100 percent because our analysis does not consider federal tax revenue from Puerto Rico, overseas U.S. territories, and payments from Americans living abroad.) Additional Federal Tax Obligation To do so, we calculated the corporate income sheltered from both state and federal taxes. First, we calculated the corporate income sheltered from federal taxes by taking the total federal business income tax revenue lost (by state) and dividing it by the effective federal corporate tax rate (35 percent). We then added this number to the corporate income sheltered from states taxes, which is the federal number multiplied by the 2015 state corporate income tax (this adjusts for the fact that state taxes are deducted from federal taxes). We then took the corporate income sheltered from state and federal taxes (by state) and multiplied it by the state corporate income tax to arrive at the state corporate tax revenue lost for each state. Once we had established the amount of state tax revenue lost for each state, we could calculate how much each small business would need to pay in state taxes to account for these losses. We divided each state’s corporate tax revenue losses by the number of small businesses in each state, as determined in point number two above, to calculate how much additional corporate income tax businesses would need to pay. To calculate the additional federal tax obligation for small businesses, we did the following: Nationwide: To illustrate the average additional federal tax obligation of corporate tax havens per small business owner nationwide, we divided $90 billion – the total amount of federal corporate tax revenue lost to corporate offshore tax havens each year – by the number of small business owners as identified above. By state: To illustrate the average additional corporate tax obligation for small businesses on a state-by-state basis, we used the gross business income tax federal revenue and apportioned it to each of the state’s share of corporate income tax payments. Once we arrived at unique percentages for each state, we multiplied each by $90 billion to get the total gross federal corporate tax revenue lost. We then divided each state’s share by the number of small businesses in each state. (Note: state-by-state percentages 18 Picking Up the Tab 2015 Additional State Tax Obligation To calculate the additional state tax obligation small businesses would have to pay due to tax haven abuse, we first had to calculate how much state tax revenue is lost due to corporate profit shifting. How Our Figures This Year Differ From Last Year’s Report In last year’s version of our report, Picking Up The Tab 2014: Average Citizens and Small Businesses Pay the Price for Offshore Tax Havens, we based our percent of net revenue attributable to each state on individual income tax and SECA tax payments, located in the IRS Databook table 5 to apportion both the total federal corporate and federal personal income tax revenue and lost. Because we focused solely on the corporate federal income revenue lost and the associated tax obligation that would be placed on small businesses, this year, we based the percent of net revenue attributable to each state on the gross federal business income tax revenue by state. Additionally, we used 35 percent as our federal corporate tax rate as opposed to 30.5 percent, used in our last report. The 35 percent could be interpreted as a slight overestimation because companies without listed offshore subsidiaries would otherwise pay an estimated 30.5 percent, the 2008 median effective tax rate for the 13 companies – out of America’s 100 largest – that did not have subsidiaries in offshore tax havens in 200738. With a 30.5 percent rate, our aggregate figures would be: a combined federal and state tax obligation of $3,326, state tax burden of $643, and federal tax burden of $2,684. However, recent findings of offshore tax dodging done by several of these 13 companies (i.e. Verizon and Walmart) suggest that offshore tax dodging may occur even when companies don’t disclose affiliates based in offshore tax havens in their annual 10-K filings with the Securities Exchange Commission. Thus, we use the 35 percent figure. Picking Up the Tab 2015 19 Appendix A: Impact of Offshore Tax Haven Abuse on Small Businesses Total Federal and State Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Combined Additional Federal and State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Total Federal Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Additional Federal Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business $108 $3,244 $90 $2,684 $18.10 $560 Alabama $1 $1,014 $0 $847 $0.10 $167 Alaska $0 $711 $0 $549 $0.01 $161 Arizona $1 $2,213 $1 $1,873 $0.20 $340 Arkansas $2 $8,202 $2 $6,848 $0.40 $1,354 California $15 $3,547 $12 $2,782 $3.20 $765 Colorado $2 $3,165 $2 $2,780 $0.30 $385 Connecticut $3 $6,933 $2 $5,635 $0.50 $1,298 Delaware $1 $15,843 $1 $12,472 $0.30 $3,370 District of Columbia $0 $5,591 $0 $4,321 $0.10 $1,270 Florida $2.70 $1,052 $2.30 $902 $0.40 $150 Georgia $3.20 $2,928 $2.70 $2,478 $0.50 $450 Hawaii $0.10 $811 $0.10 $679 $0.02 $132 Idaho $0.10 $580 $0.10 $473 $0.02 $107 Illinois $6.30 $4,570 $5.10 $3,689 $1.20 $880 Indiana $1.40 $2,421 $1.10 $1,994 $0.20 $427 Iowa $0.50 $1,721 $0.40 $1,243 $0.20 $478 Kansas $0.60 $2,118 $0.60 $1,893 $0.10 $225 Kentucky $0.70 $1,768 $0.60 $1,496 $0.10 $272 Louisiana $0.50 $1,039 $0.40 $834 $0.10 $206 Maine $0.10 $558 $0.10 $437 $0.02 $121 Maryland $1.00 $1,599 $0.80 $1,274 $0.20 $325 Massachusetts $2.90 $4,031 $2.40 $3,233 $0.60 $798 Michigan $1.50 $1,509 $1.30 $1,277 $0.20 $232 Minnesota $6.50 $10,770 $4.90 $8,237 $1.50 $2,533 State United States 20 Picking Up the Tab 2015 Total State Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Additional State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business State Total Federal and State Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Combined Additional Federal and State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Total Federal Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Additional Federal Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Total State Corporate Tax Revenue Lost to Offshore Tax Havens (billions) Additional State Corporate Tax Obligation per Small Business Mississippi $0.20 $727 $0.20 $632 $0.03 $95 Missouri $3.00 $5,024 $2.50 $4,223 $0.50 $801 Montana $0.10 $419 $0.05 $347 $0.01 $71 Nebraska $2.30 $11,351 $1.90 $9,150 $0.40 $2,201 Nevada $0.20 $740 $0.20 $740 New Hampshire $0.10 $487 $0.10 $385 $0.02 $101 New Jersey $7.10 $7,298 $5.60 $5,700 $1.60 $1,598 New Mexico $0.10 $390 $0.10 $322 $0.01 $68 New York $8.90 $3,622 $7.30 $2,976 $1.60 $647 North Carolina $2.50 $2,616 $2.20 $2,275 $0.30 $341 North Dakota $0.20 $1,899 $0.10 $1,673 $0.02 $226 Ohio $3.10 $2,898 $3.10 $2,898 Oklahoma $1.20 $3,075 $1.00 $2,602 $0.20 $473 Oregon $0.60 $1,432 $0.50 $1,161 $0.10 $271 Pennsylvania $4.20 $3,547 $3.20 $2,670 $1.00 $848 Rhode Island $1.10 $9,838 $0.90 $8,104 $0.20 $1,734 South Carolina $0.50 $1,035 $0.40 $900 $0.10 $135 South Dakota $0.10 $1,026 $0.10 $1,026 Tennessee $1.80 $2,806 $1.50 $2,343 $0.30 $463 Texas $8.50 $3,104 $8.30 $3,017 $0.20 $87 Utah $0.50 $1,496 $0.40 $1,300 $0.10 $195 Vermont $0.10 $1,223 $0.10 $968 $0.02 $255 Virginia $3.40 $4,294 $2.90 $3,634 $0.50 $660 Washington $1.40 $2,116 $1.40 $2,116 West Virginia $0.10 $819 $0.10 $683 $0.02 $135 Wisconsin $1.90 $3,595 $1.50 $2,891 $0.40 $704 Wyoming $0.05 $605 $0.05 $605 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Note: N/A indicates that a state does not collect this type of tax revenue. Picking Up the Tab 2015 21 Notes 1 Dan Smith, Steve Wamhoff, and Richard Phillips, U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Offshore Shell Games: The Use of Offshore Tax Havens by the Top 100 Publicly Traded Companies, July 2014. 2 Dan Smith, Steve Wamhoff, and Richard Phillips, U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Offshore Shell Games: The Use of Offshore Tax Havens by the Top 100 Publicly Traded Companies, July 2014. 3 Government Accountability Office, “Business and Tax Advantages Attract U.S. Persons and Enforcement Challenges Exist”, GAO-08-778, a report to the Chairman and Ranking Member, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate (July 2008), available at http://www.gao.gov/highlights/d08778high.pdf 4 Ibid. 5 Jesse Drucker, Bloomberg News, “Avoiding Taxes on Offshore Earnings an Art; Tax Holiday at Issue but Who Needs It?” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 30 December 2010. 6 Jane G. Gravelle, Congressional Research Service, Tax Havens: International Tax Avoidance and Evasion, 4 June 2010. 7 “China to Become World’s Second Largest Consumer Market”, Proactive Investors United Kingdom, January 19, 2011 (Discussing a report released by Boston Consulting Group), available at http://www.proactiveinvestors. co.uk/columns/china-weekly-bulletin/4321/china-to-become-worlds-second-largest-consumer-market-4321.html (visited 3/31/12) 8 American Sustainable Business Council, Main Street Alliance, and Small Business Majority. “Poll: Small Business Owners Say Big Businesses, Millionaires Not Paying Fair Share of Taxes” February 6, 2012, http://asbcouncil. org/sites/default/files/files/Taxes_Poll_Report_FINAL.pdf 9 Richard Rubin, “U.S. Companies Are Stashing $2.1 Trillion Overseas to Avoid Taxes,” Bloomberg, 4 March 2015. 10 Jane G. Gravelle, “Tax Havens: International Tax Avoidance and Evasion,” National Tax Journal 62(4): 727-753, December 2009. 11 Congress enacted a tax holiday for repatriated profits in 2005, per Robert C. Pozen, “A Sensible Plan to Bring U.S. Corporate Profits Home,” Brookings.edu, 13 June 2012. Some companies also use complicated tax avoidance schemes when repatriating profits. These schemes have nicknames like the “Killer B” and the “Deadly D.” The former, now blacklisted by the Internal Revenue Service, involved parent companies trading stock for cash accumulated by foreign subsidiaries. The latter requires the parent company to purchase another U.S. company which promises to pay the parent a large cash sum in the future as part of the deal. The target company promptly converts to a foreign one and can access the parent company’s offshore cash by borrowing from its existing subsidiary. It can then use this cash to pay the parent the sum it promised when it was still a U.S. firm. This payment is tax-free. For more, see Robert W. Wood, “Bringing Overseas Money to the U.S.,” Forbes, 2 May 2011, and Jesse Drucker, “Dodging Repatriation Tax Lets U.S. Companies Bring Home Cash,” Bloomberg, 29 December 2010. 22 Picking Up the Tab 2015 12 Mark P. Keightley, “An Analysis of Where American Companies Report Profits: Indications of Profit Shifting,” Congressional Research Service, January 18, 2013. 13 Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Repatriating Offshore Funds: 2004 Windfall for Select Multinationals, 2012 (pages 57-64); Office of Senator Carl Levin, New Data Show Corporate Offshore Funds Not “Trapped” Abroad: Nearly Half of SoCalled “Offshore” Funds Already in the United States (press release), 14 December 2011. 14 Dan Smith, U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Offshore Shell Games: The Use of Offshore Tax Havens by the Top 100 Publicly Traded Companies, July 2013; Connie Guglielmo, “Apple, Google Among Top U.S. Companies Parking Cash Offshore To Reduce Taxes, Study Says,” Forbes, 1 August 2013. 15 Unless otherwise indicated, all data related to specific corporations’ tax haven subsidiaries, offshored profits and likely tax liability upon repatriation of funds was collected by Citizens for Tax Justice by analyzing the most recent 10-K filings of U.S.-based corporations, which companies are required to submit to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The authors of this report are grateful to Citizens for Tax Justice for sharing their data and findings via Matt Gardner, Executive Director, Institute for Taxation and Economic Policy, email communication, 31 March 2014. 16 Institute for Policy Studies and Americans for Tax Fairness, Pfizer: Corporate Tax Dodger, 2013. 17 Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate, Caterpillar’s Offshore Tax Strategy, 1 April 2014; Office of Senator Carl Levin, Subcommittee Exposes Caterpillar Offshore Profit Shifting (press release), 31 March 2014. 18 Jesse Drucker, “Google 2.4% Rate Shows How $60 Billion Lost to Tax Loopholes,” Bloomberg, 21 October 2010. 19 Matthew Gardner, Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, Imagination at Work? GE Once Again Pays Less Than 1% in Federal Taxes, March 2015. 20 Government Accountability Office, International Taxation: Large U.S. Corporations and Federal Contractors with Subsidiaries in Jurisdictions Listed as Tax Havens or Financial Privacy Jurisdictions, December 2008. 21 States have a history of decoupling from the federal tax code when it is to their benefit. For example, after the federal government began phasing out the estate tax, 13 states and the District of Columbia decoupled from the federal government’s tax code to continue collecting revenue through the estate tax. For more, see Elizabeth C. McNichol, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Many States Are Decoupling from the Federal Estate Tax Cut, 28 March 2006. 22 For sources and explanations of how the numbers in this section were derived, see the methodology. 23 National Conference of State Legislatures, NCSL Fiscal Brief: State Balanced Budget Provisions, October 2010. 24 For sources and explanations of how the numbers in this figure were derived, see the methodology. 25 In this report, a “small business” is defined as one with 0-99 employees. 26 Peter Coy and Jesse Drucker, “Apple, Google May Profit on a Tax Holiday,” Bloomberg Businessweek, 17 March 2011; Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Tax Holiday for Overseas Corporate Profits Would Increase Deficits, Fail to Boost the Economy, and Ultimately Shift More Investment and Jobs Overseas, 8 April 2011, revised 23 June 2011. Picking Up the Tab 2015 23 27 See note 5: “Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, United States Senate.” 28 Joint Committee on Taxation, 6 June 2014. http://www.hatch.senate.gov/public/_cache/files/1b24c4cf-60054a4e-bab7-3d9e3820c509/JCT%206-6-14.pdf 29 Pew Research Center, Federal Tax System Seen in Need of Overhaul, Top Complaints: Wealthy, Corporations ‘Don’t Pay Fair Share’, 19 March 2015. 30 Guy Molyneux and Geoff Garin, Hart Research Associates, Tax Reform and the Federal Budget (memorandum), 29 January 2013. 31 American Sustainable Business Council, Main Street Alliance, and Small Business Majority, National Opinion Poll: Small Business Owners’ Views on Taxes and How to Level the Playing Field with Big Business, 6 February 2012. 32 The Main Street Alliance and American Sustainable Business Council, Poll Report: Small Business Owners’ Views on Corporate Tax Reform, April 2013. 33 The Main Street Alliance and American Sustainable Business Council, Poll Report: Small Business Owners’ Views on Corporate Tax Reform, April 2013. 34 Office of Senator Bernie Sanders, Fact Sheet on the Sanders/Schakowsky Corporate Tax Fairness Act, n.d. Note that while the fact sheet we cite is undated, it pertains to legislation introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Jan Schakowsky in February 2013, per Office of Senator Bernie Sanders, Sanders, Schakowsky Propose Tax Fairness Act (press release), 7 February 2013. 35 Jeff Gerth, Megan Murphy and Vanessa Houlder, “Corporations Couldn’t Wait To ‘Check the Box’ On Huge Tax Break,” ProPublica and Financial Times, 26 September 2011. 36 Joint Committee on Taxation, 23 May 2014. http://democrats.waysandmeans.house.gov/sites/democrats. waysandmeans.house.gov/files/113-0927%20JCT%20Revenue%20Estimate.pdf 37 Phineas Baxandall and Dan Smith, U.S. PIRG, Picking Up the Tab 2013: Average Citizens and Small Businesses Pay the Price for Offshore Tax Havens, April 2013. 38 United States Government Accountability Office (GAO), International Taxation: Large U.S. Corporations and Federal Contractors with Subsidiaries in Jurisdictions Listed as Tax Havens or Financial Privacy Jurisdictions, December 2008; Robert S. McIntyre et al., Citizens for Tax Justice, Corporate Taxpayers & Corporate Tax Dodgers 2008-10, November 2011. 24 Picking Up the Tab 2015