Posted on 05/13/2009 5:41:02 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Few subjects offer more grist for populists and more opportunity for demagoguery than that of U.S. companies, their foreign earnings and their taxes.
Posturing by politicians on this subject revolves around the fact that American companies have increased their foreign investments over a period of time when domestic jobs have disappeared in certain industries, creating a facile (and misleading) correlation in the minds of many between overseas investments and U.S. job losses. President Obama drew on that popular misconception when he announced he would seek changes in our corporate tax code last week which he claimed were designed to ensure that the government doesnt reward our companies for moving jobs off our shores.
But academic research on firms doing business overseas suggests that President Obama has it backwards. Overseas investments rarely cost jobs in a corporations home country. Instead, firms that expand overseas are generally businesses that are also growing in their home countries. They are businesses that make a countrys economy competitive worldwide. This is not only recognized by researchers whove studied the issue, but also by policy makers in other countries, which is why few other countries now try to tax their multinational corporations foreign profits in the manner that President Obama is proposing. The result, most experts concur, is likely to raise the risks of foreign expansion and discourage some firms from going abroad. That doesnt increase jobs at home.
The notion that U.S. corporate expansions overseas drain jobs here is a vestige of the 1950s and the early 1960s, when American corporations dominated a global economy consisting mostly of European countries recovering from World War II, communist countries whose industries werent competitive internationally, and the developing world. In those days, economists believed, the most likely reason a firm would open operations overseas was to take advantage of lower costs in other countries, most especially lower labor costs.
But as global competition intensified, economists noticed something unusual: For the most part, corporations in richer countries, such as the U.S., or a recovering Europe and Japan, werent investing in poorer countries where costs were low. Instead, they were investing mostly in each others markets, where costs were comparable. This became known as the Lucas Paradox, the notion that overseas investment didnt happen the way we would predict it should.
As the world economy has advanced in the last 35 years, this tendency of corporations based in wealthy countries to invest primarily in other wealthy countries has only grown: Despite the popular perception in the media that our global firms spend most of their effort opening up sweatshops in poor countries, in the latest period studied, between 1995 and 2000, multinationals in rich countries were five times more likely to invest in operations in other countries where labor costs were comparable, according to a 2005 study by economists from Harvard and the University of Houston.
What weve learned is that companies dont expand overseas primarily to eliminate local jobs, but to tap into other appealing markets where, if they succeed, they only become stronger. And lots of research has confirmed this idea, not just about U.S. firms, but about multinationals in other countries too. Studies of the Italian, French and German economies have found that when a business in one of these countries makes a decision to expand overseas the move rarely results in a net loss in domestic jobs, according to research summarized by Harvards Mihir A. Desai in a new paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Securing Jobs or the New Protectionism? In fact, a companys successful overseas expansion brings advantages to a home country, according to a study of Japanese multinationals which found that firms that increased their overseas investments also increased their domestic employment at a growth rate from three-to-eight times quicker than job growth among purely domestic firms.
The same holds true for the United States and its shrinking manufacturing industry. Desai looked at who was responsible for the decline in manufacturing jobs in the U.S. from 1986 to 2003 and found that it wasnt multinationals. In fact, they have been expanding their manufacturing jobs in the U.S. even as they have been investing overseas. Instead, the rapid decline of manufacturing employment in the late 1990s and early 2000s might well best be understood as marking the exit of purely domestic, low-productivity players rather than the displacement of domestic activity abroad by multinational firms, Desai writes.
This shouldnt be surprising. Its a difficult and risky leap to go from a domestic company to an international one, and for the most part companies that succeed at it are our strongest firms. In a global marketplace, they are the firms most likely to face down new foreign competitors entering the country. Short of high tariffs to punish foreign products and make them uncompetitive here, it is our multinationals that give us our biggest edge.
But for many politicians, the Lucas Paradox doesnt exist. To them, the world is simple: Jobs that U.S. firms create overseas are jobs that they are not creating here. We shouldnt reward firms for doing that with tax breaks.
And so, instead of cutting our corporate tax rate, the second highest among developed countries, to bring it in line with the rest of the world, or treating overseas profits in the same manner as most other developed nations which generally dont tax overseas earnings, the Obama administration will make our corporate tax code more onerous. One result, the research suggests, will be less job growth here as some U.S. firms contemplating going international decline to do so because weve further reduced the returns from setting up foreign operations and increased the risks.
What the research tells us is that patterns of international investment by big companies defy easy characterization because firms behave in ways that surprise us. Thats not the kind of stuff that can be explained easily in a sound bite at a press conference or on the campaign trail.
For a president confronting a world that doesnt conform to popular opinion, the options are clear. He can attempt to set the country on the policy path that makes the most sense and do his best to explain why. Or he can simply give people a policy that corresponds to their misconceptions. On corporate taxes, we know what course Obama is taking.
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Steven Malanga is an editor for RealClearMarkets and a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute
Don’t bother Democrats with facts. They can’t handle them.
One thing in this article that is complete wrong...overseas outsourcing has indeed lead to the loss of American jobs especially in manufacturing; although the white collar jobs are now flowing overseas at an alarming rate and any tax breaks associated with such practices should be eliminated the sooner the better.
The entire administration is “exactly backwards”...
As far as manufacturing is concerned, the US produces more now than in the past with a dramatically reduced workforce.
Plus, we produce stuff at the top end of technology.
My first job in a UAW plant ~ trucking and sweeping ~ has been MECHANIZED out of existence.
I feel no regrets.
Chicago Cook County Board President Todd Stroger owes government $11,668.10, IRS says
Spokesman says couple have made arrangements to repay tax
Comments
May 13, 2009
BY CHRIS FUSCO Staff Reporter/cfusco@suntimes.com
As he takes political heat for blocking a push to lower county sales taxes, Cook County Board President Todd Stroger is in hot water for a more personal tax issue:
He owes Uncle Sam nearly $12,000 for unpaid income taxes, recently filed records show.
» Click to enlarge image
Recently filed records show Cook County Board President Todd Stroger owes nearly $12,000 in unpaid income taxes.
(John H. White/Sun-Times)
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Defending veto, Stroger blasts repeal Stroger, wife owe IRS nearly $12K
The Internal Revenue Service slapped a $11,668.10 lien on Stroger and his wife earlier this year. The Strogers have yet to fully pay that debt, meaning the federal government could hold up a sale of the Strogers house or other property if payment terms arent reached.
Gene Mullins, a Stroger spokesman, told the Chicago Sun-Times on Tuesday night that Stroger and his wife already have made plans to pay the tax man.
But Mullins couldnt provide details beyond that, including how the Strogers let the situation get to the point where the IRS determined it needed to hold their feet to the fire by filing the income-tax lien with the Cook County recorder of deeds.
Its a bill that him and his wife have made arrangements with the IRS on, Mullins said. They made arrangements with them, and theyre paying it off right now. They worked out a payment plan with the IRS.
The IRS refuses to discuss individual tax cases. Agency officials have yet to file a public notice called a release that shows theyre satisfied that the Strogers have paid or are repaying the debt.
The $11,668.10 in the lien stems from the Strogers 2007 income tax return. It reflects what the IRS claims Stroger and his wife, Jeanine, owed the federal government as of May 19, 2008, including any monetary penalties.
The IRS filed its lien on the Strogers property including their home on South Blackstone about nine months after coming up with the $11,668.10 figure. The lien was signed March 12 and filed at the recorders office March 23.
Typically, the IRS contacts taxpayers so they can dispute its findings or work out payment terms before filing liens, said a nationally known tax expert who went over the fine print of the Strogers lien with the Sun-Times.
You could surmise there were several attempts on the part of the IRS to get him to pay or at least make a payment arrangement and he either did not respond, or, to the extent he did respond, he responded in a way that was insufficient or uncooperative, said Julian Block, a tax lawyer, author and former Chicago IRS revenue officer who now lives in New York.
Together, the Strogers made at least $226,000 in 2007: Todd Stroger pulled in $170,000 as County Board president and Jeanine Stroger made $56,700 as Illinois Secretary of State Jesse Whites equal-employment opportunity officer, according to county and state payroll records.
The lien names an IRS small business/self-employed area as being involved with the Strogers tax debt, meaning the overdue taxes might stem from other income earned by the couple.
The Sun-Times disclosure of the lien comes as Stroger faces increasing criticism for vetoing a repeal of his controversial increase in the countys sales tax rate. Stroger says a full repeal of the penny-on-the-dollar increase is irresponsible in light of county health care needs, among other things.
Contributing: Mark Konkol
IRS SLAPS $11,668.10
LIEN ON STROGER, WIFE
http://www.suntimes.com/news/1571268,CST-NWS-todd13.article
You make many good points...many.
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