RedSpawn, on 2017-December-21, 20:05, said:
None of the 'idiot' hecklers have rationalized mathematically a $1.5 trillion giveaway to Corporate America when all indicators show Corporate America is NOT hemorrhaging at all and doesn't need instant relief before Christmas.
I don't play Blue/Red talking points. That's too easy and rarely involves any research. I play math.
We have extremely low interest rates courtesy of our Federal Reserve Bank and enough quantitative easing to ensure robust liquidity in the capital markets. Corporate America didn't need the tax cut on top of the other interventionist strategies at play. That was icing on top of a cake they already had and owned outright.
Hrothgar, answer the AT&T question and present some evidence that Corporate America needed this tax relief when we all know the Average tax rates corporations pay is already lower.
https://americansfor...rate-tax-rates/
Please review this website and list which bullet points are patently false? Thanks
This website is a very biased
left-wing source. Such sources usually do not resort to outright falsehoods (unlike right-wing sources; I think the difference is that liberals are more likely to investigate claims) but they still do a lot of cherry-picking of facts. To address some of the main points:
"Corporate share of federal tax revenue has dropped by two-thirds in 60 years" -- while this is literally true, a lot of it is due to changes in the
individual tax code. Many businesses now report income as pass-throughs on their owners' tax forms. In the 1960s, the top individual rate was super-high (75%-90% I think) so there would be no incentive to report income in this way. This change in reporting makes it appear that a higher share of federal tax revenue is from individuals (some of whom own businesses) and a lower percentage is from corporations.
"General Electric, Boeing, Verizon and 23 other profitable Fortune 500 firms paid no federal income taxes from 2008 to 2012" -- again, this is literally true. But note the cherry-picking of dates. A lot of companies had enormous losses in 2007-2008 because of the economic crash. They were able to amortize these losses against their profits in subsequent years, so effectively they were still "writing off the 2007-2008 loss" up to five years later. It's common for companies (especially small companies, but even big ones) to have good and bad years and the ability to amortize losses against gains is critical to the tax code.
"Profitable corporations paid U.S. income taxes amounting to just 12.6% of worldwide income in 2010." -- why would you expect more? International companies have to pay taxes to non-US countries too. If half of profits are earned overseas, you'd expect approximately half of taxes to be paid overseas, and the US income tax rate would look like half what it would be if all the taxes were paid to the US. If we directly taxed companies on their worldwide profits (or even worse, income) then no company could operate internationally because of the duplicate taxation.
"Twenty-two of the 30 profitable Fortune 500 companies that paid the highest tax rates (30% or more) from 2008 to 2010 created almost 200,000 jobs between 2008 and 2012" -- what does this even mean? What did the other 8 companies do? Maybe they cut enough jobs to zero out the whole thing? This just seems like obvious cherry-picking.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit