Sunday, December 19, 2010

Money Making Schemes




President Obama spent much of Wednesday huddled with a group of business executives, an effort The New York Times said afterward "went a long way to reset the tone of the relationship between Mr. Obama and corporate America" in the eyes of the corporate chieftains who attended.


That's all well and good, if the problems with today's economy were rooted in a lack of warmth and fuzziness between President Obama and corporate CEOs. But they aren't. For decades, the interests of corporate lobbyists—the people acting on behalf of many of the executives at the White House meeting—have been at odds with the interests of working people. The White House "making peace" with corporate CEOs, to use The Washington Post's description of the meeting, is one thing. But Wall Street needs to make peace with those of us who have been forced, as a result of the conservative policies they promoted, to live through a decade of stagnant wages, unemployment and underemployment. Wall Street needs a reset with working America.


Unfortunately, it's not at all clear that this meeting delivered much for working-class people. The Post reported that "after the meeting, several chief executives said their conversation with the president was constructive and open as they discussed education, trade, taxes and jobs. But the executives and Obama remained vague about specific outcomes they expected from the meeting."


And one of the few specifics reported from the meeting is highly disturbing. Bloomberg reported that the CEOs had their hands out for yet another tax cut:


While Obama has called on the CEOs to spend the $2 trillion in cash their companies have accumulated on job creation, the executives said much of that is earnings from overseas sales that are retained abroad to avoid paying U.S. corporate income tax. U.S.-based multinational corporations pay corporate income tax on earnings when they are brought back to the U.S. If the revenue remains abroad, either in cash or investment in overseas facilities, the money isn’t taxed.


Obama said he would consider the issue and asked what the executives would be willing to give up in other corporate tax rates to make sure it remains revenue neutral.


Actually, in many cases the earnings involved are not necessarily from "overseas sales." Many multinational corporations have created elaborate schemes to ensure that domestic sales are credited as foreign ones in order to avoid paying corporate income tax. It's how Google avoids paying billions in corporate income taxes to the United States and the United Kingdom.


President Obama has rightly pledged to go after this tax dodge and sent some proposals to Congress last year that Citizens for Tax Justice said were "steps in the right direction." Businesses have countered with demands for a "tax holiday," The Financial Times reported in October. Again, at least until now, the Obama administration has resisted. One reason, as the FT notes, is that there is no guarantee that the money coaxed back into the U.S. will actually be used for investment and job creation.


We've been here before. In 2004 the Bush administration and the Republican Congress gave corporations a tax amnesty on profits sheltered overseas. The benefits for workers were negligible. Gannett News Service reported earlier this year in a story about Sen. Barbara Boxer's support for an offshore tax break:



A Congressional Research Service analysis published in January 2009 found that 10 of the top dozen companies that took advantage of the 2004 break cut jobs. Hewlett-Packard repatriated $14.5 billion and laid off 14,500. Pfizer repatriated $37 billion and cut 9,000 jobs in 2005.


California-based Oracle and Intel also repatriated foreign earnings. The money helped Oracle acquire two U.S. companies and helped Intel build a new factory


.


The Business Roundtable, a champion of the tax amnesty idea, says of the money that came back to the U.S. as a result of 2004 holiday, 25 percent went to capital investments and 23 percent to hiring and training new workers. Even that positive spin suggests the country doesn't get very much for coaxing businesses to do less than what they should be dong as corporate citizens.


Corporations succeed in the United States not simply because of what they do on their own. Their success depends on the quality of public schools that prepare their workers, transportation networks that move goods and people, agencies that help keep people healthy and safe, and efforts to ensure that each American is able to maintain at least a minimal standard of living. All of these are government functions that corporations undercut when they engage in schemes to avoid paying taxes, leaving the rest of us to struggle with the consequences.


The businesses that profit as a result of the public commons that We the People provide should not have to be given special inducements to pay their fair share toward supporting that commons. (As it stands now, contrary to conservative claims to the contrary, the truth is U.S. corporations pay some of the lowest tax rates of major industrial powers.) That is the starting point from which President Obama should begin in building a new tax framework in which businesses and Main Street can profit together in a new economy.


Even as corporations are seeking a tax holiday, these same corporations spent hundreds of millions of dollars electing congressional candidates opposed to government initiatives that would stimulate the economy and stoke the demand that would coax their hoarded cash off the sidelines. Instead of egging on, tacitly or otherwise, the anti-spending crowd, these CEOs could still choose to back a real economic stimulus—not just cross-your-fingers-and-hope-they-trickle-down tax cuts, but real investment in the economy's future.


Lew Prince, a small business owner in St. Louis, recently penned an op-ed that offered a more Main Street perspective on what businesses need to prosper:



We shouldn’t borrow billions more dollars from China and Saudi Arabia to give to the wealthy. Instead the wealthy should pay their fair share. We need adequate tax revenue to invest in our economy. More tax cuts at the top won’t create jobs. But we will create jobs and strengthen our economy by rebuilding our crumbling roads, bridges, public transit, levees and water and gas pipelines. We will save and create jobs by investing in education and clean energy research and manufacturing now growing much more rapidly in other countries.


Now that Obama has met with business executives, his next step should be a summit meeting with the unemployed. And then let's have a real debate in which business executives and their conservative benefactors are called to account on whether they are really interested in the fates of American workers or just in their own balance sheets.




This year, more than 600 taxi drivers were implicated in a giant taxi scam in which drivers overcharged passengers more than $1.1 million by flipping switches on their meters that kicked in higher rates. In the wake of the scandal, the Taxi and Limousine Company scrambled to portray the incident as a series of isolated incidents and mistakes by a select number of drivers. But according to one of those taxi scammers, these were no Lee Harvey Oswalds: it really was all a giant evil conspiracy!



According to driver Joseph Kastner, a group of drivers would meet together at cabby conferences in garages around the city and plot their nefarious schemes. "I met a series of drivers who decided to rob the public. They were actually having meetings at my old garage," Kastner, 49, told the TLC during a Sept. 30 administrative court hearing. Kastner is one of those accused drivers; he is charged with allegedly cheated 3,925 passengers out of $7,756, the sixth highest amount for an individual driver. Kastner claims that he wanted to become a whistleblower, alleging that the scams were much bigger than let on previously, and that he had stuff on the TLC as well, but no one took his offer: "I tried to tell them over and over again at the hearing. They didn't listen to a word I said. They just don't want to hear it," he told the Post.



So is Kastner trying to escape his fate by alleging a citywide conspiracy, making up stories to look better, or is there really an underground network of thieving taxi drivers plotting to steal unwitting customer's money? TLC obviously didn't take his claims seriously, but the Post sides with Kastner, saying that other cabbies and industry insiders confirm his story, and bad hacks pull other stunts such as charging drivers to put on the heat, pressing the "extra" button on tolls and bridges, and posing as livery drivers at airports and charging more than double the flat fee of $45 to Manhattan. Whether or not the conspiracy is as widespread as Kastner would have you believe, the best thing you can do is consult the Passenger Bill of Rights, and always be vigilant of extra charges of any kind.





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Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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FOX <b>News</b> Misinformed Viewers | Media Matters | MSNBC | Mediaite

Last night on MSNBC's Countdown, substitute host Christopher Hayes and guest representative from Media Matters Ari Rabin-Havt discussed the results of the University of Maryland poll that concluded Fox News viewers to be the most ...

Latest Pakistani <b>News</b>, Breaking <b>News</b>, China, Pakistan ink trade <b>...</b>

ISLAMABAD: With 13 agreements already signed, Pakistan and China were expected to ink additional economic deals worth billions more Saturday, the second day.

Arrowheadlines: Chiefs <b>News</b> 12/19 - Arrowhead Pride

Game Day!!! If you're not pumped for this game, you're not paying attention to what's at stake. Today's Kansas City Chiefs news steps up to the challenge. Cassel, Smith, and Jones each get great stories. To the fans going to the game, ...



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