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Big Companies Collecting State Taxes From Workers And Keeping The Money

Posted: 04/12/2012 12:01 am Updated: 04/12/2012 11:22 am



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By David Cay Johnston

April 12 (Reuters) - Across the United States more than 2,700 companies are collecting state income taxes from hundreds of thousands of workers - and are keeping the money with the states' approval, says an eye-opening report published on Thursday.

The report from Good Jobs First, a nonprofit taxpayer watchdog organization funded by Ford, Surdna and other major foundations, identifies 16 states that let companies divert some or all of the state income taxes deducted from workers' paychecks. None of the states requires notifying the workers, whose withholdings are treated as taxes they paid.

General Electric, Goldman Sachs, Procter & Gamble, Chrysler, Ford, General Motors and AMC Theatres enjoy deals to keep state taxes deducted from their workers' paychecks, the report shows. Foreign companies also enjoy such arrangements, including Electrolux, Nissan, Toyota and a host of Canadian, Japanese and European banks, Good Jobs First says.

Why do state governments do this? Public records show that large companies often pay little or no state income tax in states where they have large operations, as this column has documented. Some companies get discounts on property, sales and other taxes. So how to provide even more subsidies without writing a check? Simple. Let corporations keep the state income taxes deducted from their workers' paychecks for up to 25 years.

It was not always this way. Letting companies keep their workers' state taxes apparently began in Kentucky two decades ago as a way to retain jobs.

Last July when I wrote about six big companies that pocket Illinois state taxes () I knew there was more to this. But I had no idea how pervasive these diversions were until I read an advance copy of the 39-page report by Good Jobs First.


CORPORATE SOCIALISM

Deals cut with the states over the past two decades diverted $5.5 billion from public purposes to private gain, the report says. Close to $700 million more was diverted last year, Good Jobs First estimates.

New Jersey approved $73.2 million in new deals in 2011 on top of $178 million diverted that year alone under previous deals. I calculate that at nearly $80 per household in corporate welfare based on New Jersey's 3.1 million households.

These deals typify corporate socialism, in which business gains are privatized and costs socialized. They also mean government picks winners and losers, interfering with competitive markets. Leaders in both parties embrace these giveaways because they draw campaign donations from corporate interests and votes from people who do not understand that they are subsidizing huge companies.

Michael Press, a Connecticut consultant on tax incentives, says such deals, however troubling, are an inevitable result of the U.S. Constitution setting up competition between the states.

"In an ideal world we would not provide any corporate subsidies," Press told me. "It looks like corruption. But if you do it right, if you only target those companies whose behavior you change to create jobs or keep jobs in your state then these targeted temporary arrangements are cheaper - much cheaper - and can be more effective than an overall reduction in tax rates."

The mission of Good Jobs First (www.goodjobsfirst.org) is making economic development subsidies accountable and effective. In years of working with their data I have always found it sound. While Greg LeRoy, Good Jobs First's founder, has rooted out all sorts of hidden subsidies over the years, he emphasizes that he is not inherently hostile to them, only to secrecy, waste and what he calls job piracy and job blackmail.

"Job piracy" occurs when one state diverts taxes to lure an employer across state lines. AMC Entertainment announced a deal last year to move its corporate headquarters from Kansas City, Mo., to a nearby Kansas suburb. In return, Good Jobs First said, Kansas will let the multiplex chain keep $47 million of state income taxes withheld from its workers' paychecks, a drain on public finances that did not create any jobs, but does enrich the Wall Street firms that own AMC including arms of J. P. Morgan, Apollo Management, Bain Capital and the Carlyle Group. AMC declined to answer my questions.

"Job blackmail" occurs when a company threatens to close a plant unless it gets tax money.

In Illinois, the law requires companies to threaten to leave before they can keep taxes withheld from paychecks. Motorola Mobility, now being acquired by Google; the truck maker Navistar; the German manufacturer Continental Tire, and three auto makers - Chrysler, Ford and Mitsubishi - get to keep $346.8 milli on in t axes over 10 years because they threatened to leave Illinois. Navistar can pocket $62.1 million even if it fires a quarter of its Illinois workforce, its contract shows. A recent deal gives Sears $150 million, Good Jobs First reported.


PROMISES OF JOBS

Promising to retain jobs can be lucrative. General Electric invested $126 million updating part of its Ohio operations. In return, GE gets a tax credit equal to $115.3 million of its worker taxes, recovering 92 percent of its investment. A sweet deal for GE, but not its competitors.

Gary Sheffer, GE's top spokesman, said the company told its workers about the deal. In all, he said, GE is investing around $300 million in Ohio and "the resulting taxes the state will receive will far exceed the tax credits provided to GE."

That response, I think, misses the point - GE should pay its own bills without taking welfare.

Many figures in the Good Jobs First report are from disclosure reports some states make. Others come from news accounts and company announcements.

Total revenue losses are higher than the report states. First, some states hide the costs. Phil Mattera, the research director at Good Jobs First, said he lists the cost as zero for states that hide the numbers.

Good Jobs First wants to end these diversions, but failing that recommends mandatory disclosure to the workers as the first reform. I concur. It's the first step in ending corporate welfare as we know it.

FOLLOW BUSINESS

* By David Cay Johnston April 12 (Reuters) - Across the United States more than 2,700 companies are collecting state income taxes from hundreds of thous...
* By David Cay Johnston April 12 (Reuters) - Across the United States more than 2,700 companies are collecting state income taxes from hundreds of thous...
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01:07 PM on 04/20/2012
Keep voting...
09:37 AM on 04/17/2012
This is just one of the incentives that states resort to in order to keep companies in their state; that's why they call it tax incentives and this is one way of accomplishing it. And, you should notice (on the map from the original Reuters article) that all the states giving these incentives were forced unionism states, or it was given in a year before the particular state became a right-to-work state.
Someone's point just backfired.
10:31 PM on 04/16/2012
Welcome to Third World USA.
04:40 PM on 04/15/2012
Look at the state of Florida and what Governor Rick Scott did. He made state employees pay 3 % for their retirement fund. All he did was take that money and put it in the general fund to balance the states budget. It doesn't go for state employee retirements. Wrong in so many ways! Crooked too!
11:10 AM on 04/15/2012
There are many underhanded and dishonest things going on between our governments and the business leaders .

We had to amend our taxes because we owed $13 more. It was hard to do even with a tax program since I didn't understand how they figured it. I guess it was worth it to support a rich business man.

It was bad that they build all the baseball stadiums with tax money then the owners get to pocket the profits off of the team. The tax payer gets zero back. They have went from bad to worse.

I keep hoping they have a master plan, but even if they do, the loss of respect and trust will not come back. People have paid in for 45 years to get Social Security and Medicare and they don't want to give the money back. Them letting the medical industry and Insurance companies overcharge Medicare is so dishonest.
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regulargal
Protect children, not guns.
02:10 PM on 04/14/2012
This is simply robbing the working poor to pay the very rich. Roads and bridges are crumbling, public schools are closing, state college tuitions are skyrocketing, and on and on. When will this blatant corporate welfare/robbery be more widely reported?
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Todd Behrmann
04:41 PM on 04/13/2012
So money I earn is literally going right back to the employer, instead of paying for what's needed; like education, roads, etc!
04:15 PM on 04/13/2012
The Chinese, Indian and Brazilian governments have a plan to increase the net number of jobs created in their countries. In the United States, we spend half our energy moving jobs from state to state. Gov. Perry can boast about the number of jobs created in Texas. But he leaves out that a lot of those jobs used to be in other states. Creating jobs in Texas at the expensive of jobs in Ohio isn't exactly going to fix the nation's economy. States need to work together and not against one another, and the federal government needs to do more to coordinate policy. China and Germany have done masterful jobs of creating manufacturing clusters in their nations ( often times spanning several states). Factory A may make electronic devices. Factory B may make the clean suits that the workers in Factory A wear. Factory C may make the tools that Factory A uses to build the electronic devices. They're all clustered in the same nation often in the same region, supply lines are short. Costs are low. And there are a lot of jobs created. The US used to have these sort of clusters in the rust belt. But decades of state on state competition has destroyed that. Until we recognize that its the US vs. other nations and not state vs. state, the country as a whole will suffer.
03:38 PM on 04/13/2012
So let me see if I understand this correctly. The employees paychecks and year-end W2 shows that he paid certain amount of tax money form his wages to the State government. But in reality he pays this money only to his employer. I think the 'invisible hand' just got into the workers wallet again.
itolduso
lateral thinker
05:51 PM on 04/14/2012
All those 'budget deficits' that Governor's used to justify firing public workers, cutting funding to social safety nets, closing public health clinics, laying off firefighters, and teachers, and court clerks and crossing guards......this is also why states had to double the fees for renewing your driver's license, and charge more for county services, and raise your utility fees and taxes, and close your local parks and libraries and swimming pools....
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redsoxpagan
02:03 PM on 04/13/2012
and this makes the US different from a banana republic, how?
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Carl Caroli
I just don't understand people
01:22 PM on 04/13/2012
We been had. The cozy, corrupt relationship between state governments and corporations will increasingly work against the working class.
12:33 PM on 04/13/2012
This is the embodiment of the trickle down theory loved by Conservatives.
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12:27 PM on 04/13/2012
There needs to be a national policy on businesses moving for tax benefits. The gaining state cheers and we ignore what happened to the losing state. Threats for tax money? Extortion and nothing more.
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JustinP213
I dislike all political parties.
11:23 AM on 04/13/2012
I've read a lot of articles that have made my blood boil over the years. But, this one is near the top. It is unconscionable that a state would allow a company to KEEP money that we assume is going to our respective state's treasury. I am absolutely disgusted.
09:34 PM on 04/19/2012
Me too
04:19 PM on 04/20/2012
It's a tax incentive to keep the company in the state versus moving to another state, in which case the first state then has lots of unemployed workers as the company moves the operations. Consider it that the state income taxes are paid to the state but then the state turns around and returns it to the company as an incentive to stay. Sad but true. Happens in all different shapes and forms. It's really no different from a state giving a tax incentive to a company to move an operation to that state or a sports teams bargaining for tax breaks for a new stadium or it will move to a different city / state. same thing.
10:45 AM on 04/13/2012
This is further proof that we are controled by the wealthy business owners. Everything passed into law for the last 20 years has had a negitive effect on the middle class. When you hear republicans saying we have to take this country back, they don't mean it.