Skip to content Skip to footer

How Apple Is Hurting the US Taxpayer

It’s time to close corporate loopholes to make it harder for companies to dodge US taxes.

The fifth avenue Apple Store in New York City; April 5, 2012. (Photo: Lewis Tse Pui Lung / Shutterstock.com)

Join the movement for independent media – no ads, no corporate pressure, just the facts. Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to Truthout today!

It’s the holidays, and whether you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa or anything else, there’s one thing that we all have in common.

Corporate America wants us all to buy stuff, lots of stuff.

And from a purely economic standpoint, the holiday season is a big boon for retailers and manufacturers who wait all year for their products to fly off the shelves on black Friday and the month leading up to Christmas and the New Year.

See more news and opinion from Thom Hartmann at Truthout here.

But where’s all that money we spend actually ending up?

It’s not going to taxes, and it’s not circulating through the US economy.

No, because companies like Apple, General Electric, Boeing and Verizon don’t pay much in taxes relative to their earnings, at least not here in the US.

Take a look as “60 Minutes’ ” Charlie Rose pressed Apple CEO Tim Cook on the issue.

That last sentence from Cook is really strange, because it’s technically true, but it’s beside the point.

The real question isn’t whether Apple “pays what it owes,” the real question is whether Apple is hiding massive amounts of profit offshore so that their CPAs can calculate that Apple owes less than it really should.

As Charlie Rose pointed out, congressional and independent probes have shown that that’s exactly what Apple is doing.

And they’re making a killing by doing it, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found that Apple avoided paying $9 billion in US taxes.

SEC filings show that Apple holds more than $181 billion in offshore profits, more than any other US company, and they would owe roughly a third of that, about $60 billion, if they tried to bring the money back into the United States.

But it’s not just Apple, it’s pretty much all of the biggest corporations on the Fortune 500.

According to research done by Citizens for Tax Justice and the US Public Interest Research Group Education Fund – the 500 largest US companies hold more than $2.1 trillion of accumulated profits offshore, just to avoid supporting the US by paying the US taxes they should.

The same research shows that they would collectively owe more than $620 billion if they decided to bring that money back home.

One thing that pretty much every presidential candidate points out as a problem, even if they disagree about what needs to be done about it, is the fact that companies are dodging our taxes and storing their massive profits overseas.

In 1952, Corporate Income Taxes made up 32 percent of Federal Revenue, today those taxes make up closer to 10 percent of federal revenue.

And you and I personally are making up the difference.

Payroll taxes have increased as a portion of federal revenue by more than corporate income taxes have decreased. In the 1950s, payroll taxes only made up about 10 percent of federal revenue, and now they provide roughly 40 percent of what it costs to run our government and keep our streets paved.

That’s right, the richest companies are hiding TRILLIONS of dollars overseas, and the average working American is paying the difference in taxes.

According to Americans for Tax Fairness and Citizens for Tax Justice, companies like General Electric, Boeing, Verizon and 23 other firms paid zero, none, zilch, in federal income taxes between 2008 and 2012.

That’s right, according to that research, for four years, 26 of the most profitable companies that the world has ever seen paid nothing in taxes. And 111 other firms paid nothing in at least one of those years.

Americans for Tax Fairness and Citizens for Tax Justice also noted that 288 other Fortune 500 firms only paid a tax rate of 19.4 percent.

To put that in perspective, that’s in the neighborhood of what a single person who earns $30,000 a year has to pay on his or her income.

According to Citizens for Tax Justice, at least 358 companies on the Fortune 500 were operating subsidiaries in tax havens at the end of 2014, a strategy that if you or I tried, we’d end up in jail.

And as Vermont senator and Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders has been pointing out for years, some of those companies even end up getting rebates from the government.

Which means that your tax dollars are not just paying to make up the loss in federal revenue that these giant corporations aren’t paying, it means that your tax dollars are actually being used to subsidize those corporations that aren’t paying taxes.

Over the last 60 years, and on steroids since the advent of Reaganomics, our tax code has created a massive redistribution of wealth from average working people into the offshore corporate bank accounts both these companies and many of their senior executives and large stockholders.

Tim Cook probably isn’t evil, and he didn’t even really lie to Charlie Rose, Apple pays what it technically owes year to year.

The problem is, thanks to corporate shell games and an easily exploited corporate tax code, Apple and the US’ other largest corporations simply don’t owe, and thus, don’t pay, as much as they should.

Which is why it’s time to close corporate loopholes to make it harder, and more expensive, for companies to dodge US taxes and offshore their profits.

We’re not going to stand for it. Are you?

You don’t bury your head in the sand. You know as well as we do what we’re facing as a country, as a people, and as a global community. Here at Truthout, we’re gearing up to meet these threats head on, but we need your support to do it: We still need to raise $14,000 to ensure we can keep publishing independent journalism that doesn’t shy away from difficult — and often dangerous — topics.

We can do this vital work because unlike most media, our journalism is free from government or corporate influence and censorship. But this is only sustainable if we have your support. If you like what you’re reading or just value what we do, will you take a few seconds to contribute to our work?