Mark Gongloff for the HuffPo writes: Apple CEO Tim Cook
waved a magic wand in front of America on Tuesday, vanishing our
outrage over how shamelessly companies avoid paying taxes, leaving the
rest of us to foot the bill. As a public service to you, here is a chart
that should enrage you about corporate tax rates all over again! (Story
continues below chart of RAGE.)
Notice the beige stripe that is shrinking steadily? That stripe is
the percentage corporate taxes contribute to total federal revenue. And
notice the olive-green stripe that has swollen to be larger than the
beige stripe used to be? That is the contribution of payroll taxes to
federal revenue.
What this shows is how dramatically corporate tax contributions have
shrunk in the past several decades, and how our personal taxes have
risen to fill the gap. Payroll taxes now make up 35 percent of all
federal government tax receipts, up from 11 percent in 1950. Corporate
income taxes, meanwhile, now make up less than 10 percent of federal
revenue, down from about 26 percent in 1950.
To 'splain those numbers a little more clearly: We who are on the
payrolls of companies now bear way more of a tax burden than those
companies bore decades ago. Those companies, meanwhile, bear less of a
burden than we ever did.
And this doesn't include individual income tax, which accounts for
about 46 percent of total federal tax receipts, roughly the same as 60
years ago.
Update: This chart of course does not reflect the
fact that employers typically cover half of the payroll taxes collected
by the government. Assuming companies pay half of the payroll taxes in
this chart, the total tax burden for individual Americans is reduced to
about 63 percent of total federal revenue, instead of 81 percent, as I
estimated in an earlier version of this story. But that is up from about
45 percent in 1950.
And the total corporate contribution to federal revenue, including
employers' share of payroll taxes, has dwindled from 32 percent in 1950
to about 17 percent today. Employer contributions to payroll taxes make
the unfairness of the tax code slightly less unfair, but the trend is
still clear and dramatic: Corporations are paying a lot less than they
used to.
This chart was produced for a September 2012 report
(download-y PDF file) about corporate tax avoidance by the Senate
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Walter Hickey of Business
Insider helpfully republished the chart on Tuesday, in honor of Cook's testimony before the same subcommittee.
Cook was there to techsplain how Apple holding $102 billion of cash offshore
isn't really tax avoidance so much as good old fashioned ingenuity.
Also, have you forgotten the shiny objects Apple makes (including the
dreamy MacBook Air on which this here story was typed)? By the end of
the hearing, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) had demanded that Congress apologize to Apple for the inconvenience, and Sen. John McCain (R-My Lawn) was reduced to gently jibing Cook about how often he has to update his apps.
And Rand Paul is kind of right, you guys, as is Tim Cook: We should
not be so mad at Apple for doing what the law allows. We should be mad
that the law allows Apple and other companies to keep billions of
dollars of cash offshore and out of the government coffers, where it
could be helping the unemployed and our crumbling infrastructure and
such. Another thing we can get mad about is how the "corporate tax
reform" that Cook and other corporate leaders are always banging on
about will actually serve to make it so companies pay even less in taxes than they do now.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
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