Lucille
Member
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2007
- Messages
- 15,019
CONgress is upset and is attempting to force it to remain here in "the land of the free." (FACTA is even worse for American businesses, especially smalls, but they don't care about them.)
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-05-13/congress-vows-keep-erectile-dysfunction-america
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-corporate-income-tax-has-got-to-go/
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-05-13/congress-vows-keep-erectile-dysfunction-america
...I am reminded of a quote by Evelyn Beatrice Hall; in her biography of Voltaire, Ms. Hall wrote "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."
I disapprove of much of the way the big pharma industry operates. But I still think they should be free to conduct their business.
But as I was flying in to Santiago from Dallas overnight, I read a troubling story in the Financial Times about Pfizer's bid to take over British drug company AstraZeneca.
One of the prime reasons that Pfizer is so interested is because the takeover would afford them the opportunity to redomicile the business in England.
Why do this? Because right now they're paying US corporate tax... which is substantially higher than in the UK.
So by moving the business abroad, the company would save shareholders billions.
[...]
The FT quotes Oregon Senator Ron Wyden as saying "I don't approach retroactivity in legislation lightly, but corporations must understand that they won't profit from abandoning the US..."
Ummm, actually that's the whole point, Senator. The tax situation is so onerous that people do profit when they leave the US. That's WHY people leave the US. Duh.
But like the drug companies themselves, Congress isn't looking at the root cause. They're treating the symptom.
In this case, the symptom is American businesses heading overseas to escape the highest tax regime in the developed world.
The federal corporate tax rate alone can be as high as 38%, and that's before including state corporate taxes, or personal taxes on the dividend distributions to shareholders.
And that is precisely the underlying cause: everyone is taxed to the hilt so that the government can continue squandering it all and indebting future generations.
Anyone with the means can see the writing on the wall and is opting out of this system.
Bear in mind that what Pfizer is proposing is completely legal. There are no laws that prevent the company from acquiring another firm and moving the headquarters abroad.
None of this seems to matter.
'Cuz hey, why bother making the tax code more competitive and cleaning up the balance sheet when you can just threaten people at gunpoint?
Why do this? Because right now they're paying US corporate tax... which is substantially higher than in the UK.
So by moving the business abroad, the company would save shareholders billions.
Uncle Sam has a big problem with this. And Congress is jumping all over Pfizer to block the deal... even going so far as to propose RETROACTIVE legislation.
In other words, they're willing to go back in time to kill the deal before it even gets started...
http://www.theamericanconservative.com/the-corporate-income-tax-has-got-to-go/
News that Pfizer, the world’s largest pharmaceutical company, plans to buy Britain’s AstraZeneca for $106 billion, renounce its U.S. citizenship, and declare itself a British company, has jolted Congress. Pfizer is being denounced as disloyal to the land of its birth, and politicians are devising ways to stop Pfizer from departing.
Yet Pfizer is not alone. Hedge fund managers are urging giant corporations like Walgreens to go nation-shopping for new residences abroad to evade the 35 percent U.S. corporate income tax. Britain’s corporate income tax is 20 percent, and Pfizer stands to save over $1 billion a year by moving there.
In what are called “inversions,” dozens of U.S. companies have bought up foreign rivals, and then moved abroad to countries with lower tax rates, cutting revenue to the U.S. Treasury. But Pfizer is far and away the biggest.
The real question, however, is not why companies are fleeing the USA, but why our politicians continue to drive them out of the country.
[...]
Looking back, consider what our political class has done to our once self-sufficient American Republic. We impose on businesses, our principal job creators, the most punitive corporate tax rate in the West. Through “free trade,” we tell U.S. companies that if they wish to avoid our taxes and get around our minimum wage, health, safety, and environmental laws, they can move to China, produce there, and bring their products back free of charge—and kill their competitors too patriotic to leave America.
“The Decline and Fall of the United States of America” is going to be a piece of cake for future historians to write.