All Hail Exxon

Posted February 15, 2008 | 05:09 PM (EST)



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I can't believe Investors Business Daily would do so little checking of an editorial on Tuesday slamming the critics of ExxonMobil.

The editorial, "Record Profits Mean Record Taxes," is based in large part on a blog post by Mark Perry, an economics professor at the Flint, Mich., satellite campus of the University of Michigan and, more revealingly, an adjunct scholar at the hard-right, free-marketeer Mackinac Center for Public Policy.

The Perry blog post is also making the rounds of free-marketeer web sites with its argument that Exxon pays so much tax that we must offer gratitude instead of criticizing its record $40.6 billion profit in 2007, or its $39.1 billion in 2006 profit.

Perry's bottom line is that poor people don't pay taxes like Exxon does, and thus Exxon is the better citizen. But he doesn't even prove this point.

Perry notes from Exxon's year-end unaudited figures that it paid, or expected to pay, $30 billion in taxes worldwide to all governments at all levels for 2007, on pre-tax profit of $70.6 billion, which would be a 42% tax rate. That's 42%, of course, after the accountants have deducted or excluded or stashed overseas every possible cent. The $30 billion in taxes can also be viewed as about 7% of Exxon's total revenue, $405 billion.

Perry notes that over three years, Exxon's annual taxes average $27 million. He then makes a comparison to U.S. income taxes paid in 2004 by the bottom half of American taxpayers, a measly $27.9 billion total. He calls that a 4% tax rate.

Here's what Perry, much less the Business Daily editorial, forgets to mention about those taxpayers:

Their average taxable income is about $14,000 a year.

Their federal income tax at that level would be dwarfed by payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid (7.65%).

State and local income taxes are not included.

Sales taxes are not included.

Property taxes, or landlord property taxes as part of rent, are not included.

Vehicle registration and taxes are not included.

Even state and federal gasoline taxes (non-sales) are not included.

None of these low-income Americans' taxes went to Kazakhstan, Chad, Nigeria or other corrupt nations with which Exxon does business. Some certainly went to U.S. costs linked to keeping Exxon's overseas investments safe -- such things as naval costs for protection of oil shipping lanes.

None of these little taxpayers shared in the billions of federal government subsidies to oil companies that their taxes also helped fund.

The comparison is the ultimate apples to oranges, and mean-spirited to boot.

The IBD editorial goes on to say:


"That [Exxon] profit, so loathed by the left, actually plays an important role. No, it's not used to light the fat cigars Exxon Mobil executives smoke to celebrate the successful squeezing of consumers.


"Rather, the money is plowed back into research, development, exploration and drilling to keep the oil flowing, and distributed to stockholders who have risked their capital to build an enterprise that provides an essential good -- the lifeblood of our economy."

On the cigar point, the editorial is probably right. On the rest, hardly.

Over the last three years, Exxon has spent an average of at least $25 billion a year on buying back its own stock instead of investing in growth or modernization. The buybacks are a corporate piggybank with little or no economic use except for keeping the stock price high. It doesn't even boost dividends.

Exxon's daily cash on hand in 2007 averaged $33 billion. Yet it continues to resist paying $2.5 billion in punitive damages to Alaskans permanently harmed by the negligent Exxon-Valdez oil spill in 1989. Imagine what Exxon's lawyers are being paid, year after year, on this case.

And, just to compare to those $14,000-a-year folks, some of whom are no doubt Exxon employees, Exxon's 2006 compensation to CEO Rex Tillerson included $13 million in direct payment, another $13.5 million in stock grants, and $480,000 in perks including $100,000 for "personal use" of the corporate jet. That doesn't include his right to more than $20 million any time he decides to "retire."

The editorial singles out our small foundation for criticism, along with Sen. Carl Levin and others who dare to say Exxon is harming consumers and the economy. It isn't the pinnacle of Richard Nixon's enemies list, but I'm still proud of the distinction.

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I agree that high gas prices are painful, and I'd like them lower(*).

The thing is, I'm not sure we can blame anyone but ourselves. Every year we (in the US) buy more Pickups SUVs than cars. Every year we get poorer MPG (the real average based on our SUVs), and every year we drive more miles (total family mileage).

Is it any surprise that Exxon (etc.) make more in this environment? Supply and demand. We demand more from them ... rather than what we rationally should, less and less.

Ah well, if you want to cut your gasoline bill in half you can do what I did ... I bought a Prius. If Exxon is banking a lot of money, it probably isn't mine.

Best,

Odo

* - Well, perhaps with a carbon tax added in, for the global warming side.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 02/19/2008

It is the meanness and arrogance in refusing to restore the Alaskan environment destroyed by their own oil-tanker that I think of every time I see the Exxon logo, which is the reason I have never bought from them. How anyone can defend this rapacious, greedy organization is beyond me. Let's hope that their choice of buying back stock rather than investing profits in renewable energy research catches them unprepared for the energy industries of the furture, and that they go the way of the dinosaurs and fossilized feces that they are making such obscene profits from.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 PM on 02/15/2008

Sadly, in these days of interlocking ownerships you'd probably be shocked at how much business you do with Exxon. In fact, I'll give you an example. It's my understanding that fax technology came out of Exxon research labs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 02/16/2008

Judy, Judy, Judy - what is it with progressives and the understanding of profit/loss statements?

Exxon earned $40.6 billion profit on what amount of sales? By leaving the sales side out of the equation it leaves the reader to believe that sales are flat or falling and the price of their product is artificially high.

But that is not the case. As their profits rise so do their sales - that's how private businesses stay in business.

Their profit to sales ratio is just a little over 10%. Holly cow what a rip-off you say? Well Microsoft has a ratio closer to 20% - they just don't have the sales of Exxon - and if they did you would be howling to the moon about that.

Bottom line - headlines about the amount of a company's profits without the sales side of the equation to put it in context is nothing short of criminal reporting.

Your complaint is with Microsoft - not Exxon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 PM on 02/15/2008

With all due respect, this is quite ridiculous. Exxon sells a product, the price of which increaes due to the price fixing actions of a cartel that would be illegal if done in this country. No socially redeeming value tthere. In fact the term "windfall profits" was explicitly coined to apply to just this sort of situation.

Talk abut the best government that money can buy. Exxon gets a deduction for oil exploration, deduction for oil production, a windfall wealth increase if it follows the lead of OPEC in ensuring that the amount of oil making its way to market totals somewhat less than aggregate demand, and a depletion allowance for every barrel of oil that it actually breaks down and brings to market.

These guys make more money off of not producing oil than they do even from producing it and you would find that kind of conduct above criticism why?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 PM on 02/15/2008

As trivia, oldpotsmuggler, America actually invented just this sort of price fixing. For years the Texas Railroad Commission was tasked with providing price stability ...

"... from its founding in 1891 to a multi-divisional regulatory commission that oversaw not only railroads but also a number of other industries central to the modern American
economy: petroleum production, natural gas utilities, and motor carriers."

More here. It's a surprising history to someone (me too) who grew up in the OPEC age.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 02/19/2008

Good post! As usual, rich corporate elitists have a totally twisted "spun" view of how the world works. It's hard to imagine anyone feeling sorry for Exxon... especially US taxpayers who through government oil subsidies help buouy the company to its record-breaking profits.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:28 PM on 02/15/2008

Exxon is no good little American. they are corrupt, immoral, and decidedly not pro American. They are pro Greed, that and nothing more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 02/15/2008
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