Offshore Thing
Go after the $300 billion
in taxes that aren't collected each year
by Samuel Loewenberg
The American Prospect magazine,
March 2004
George W. Bush seems to have the Democrats
fiscally stymied. They can try to rescind most of his tax cuts,
but as responsible fiscal stewards they would need that money
to close his huge deficits-and could forget about addressing public
needs. Alternatively, they could try to restore social outlay
and take a lot of heat for being irresponsible about the deficit.
In fact, there's another, far better option
that almost nobody mentions: collecting the hundreds of billions
of dollars that the taxman leaves on the table. According to estimates
from former Internal Revenue Service officials and independent
tax experts, between $250 billion and $300 billion in owed taxes
goes uncollected every year. Today, federal revenue is just 16.6
percent of the gross domestic product, the lowest ratio in 45
years. And corporate tax receipts are down to just 1.Z percent
of the GDP, which is nearly half of what it was in 1998 and 1.2
percent less than it was in 1990 during the last recession. This
revenue erosion is only partly due to Bush's tax cuts or the recent
recession. In little-noticed moves over the last decade, Congress
and the current administration have greatly eroded the ability
of the federal government to collect taxes.
Going after this money wouldn't raise
rates for law-abiding citizens. It would simply force tax cheats-in
dollar terms, those are overwhelmingly corporations and the wealthy-to
pay their fair share under existing tax laws. "The easiest
way politically and substantively to address [policy] priorities
should be more effectively enforcing the laws we now have against
those who have been taking advantage of the system," Lawrence
Summers, the former treasury secretary and current president of
Harvard University, told me. While in government, Summers led
a collaborative effort with the Europeans to crack down on offshore
tax havens-an initiative that Bush appointees quickly killed.
As Summers observes, a tax-enforcement strategy would give Democrats
a way both to be fiscally responsible and to finance desperately
needed social spending.
What happened to tax enforcement? It has
been crippled by four overlapping assaults. In the 1990s, legitimate
concern about a few overzealous prosecutions led Congress to create
new "taxpayer rights" that hobbled legitimate tax collection.
The Republican-led Congress underfunded the IRS, and the Bush
administration has steered its audit efforts away from corporations
and the wealthy. New loopholes written into the tax code made
it easier for legitimate tax avoidance maneuvers to slide into
illegal-but hard to uncover-tax evasion. And the use of foreign
tax havens became ever more brazen.
According to recent congressional hearings,
major accomplices in spreading illegal or barely legal tax-avoidance
schemes are the very accounting firms, investment banks, and white-shoe
law partnerships that are supposed to be the country's financial
gatekeepers. One former Treasury Department official calls them
"the arms merchants behind the tax-evasion arms race."
In fact, many of the "financial products" they peddle
are simply different versions of the fraudulent tax shelters devised
by some of the same people for companies like Enron and Tyco.
These tax schemes, which proliferated
during the late 1990s boom, depend on the premise that they will
be too complicated for regulators to understand. They utilize
a multilayered web of sham tax-free entities, including partnerships,
nonprofit corporations, and trust funds. One scheme, dubbed "Slapshot"
by its purveyors at J.P. Morgan, was designed to save Enron $120
million in taxes. The sleight of hand "was concealed within
a mind-boggling array of loans, stock swaps, structured finance
transactions," according to Senator Carl Levin, the ranking
Democrat on the Senate investigations subcommittee of the Governmental
Affairs Committee, who eventually uncovered the scheme.
Levin has been among a handful of legislators
working to expose the institutionalization of tax scams. In November,
he held hearings showing how the Big Four accounting firm KPMG
made millions peddling abusive tax shelters. The hearing revealed
the workings of one of the dodges marketed by the firm, dubbed
"BLIPS". It started with a sham high-interest loan that
was run through a paper partnership, which then formed a shell
corporation, which then washed the money through rigged foreign-currency
trades. The scam had the cooperation of both a merchant bank and
the white-shoe law firm Sidley Austin Brown & Wood,which wrote
dozens of certification letters-at a cost of more than $50,000
per letter- providing a legal basis for the scheme. In total,
this one ploy cost taxpayers $1.4 billion in lost revenue.
KPMG went ever further, mass marketing
these tax scams using a full-scale telemarketing center based
in Fort Wayne, Indiana. This boiler-room operation (which the
firm called its "Tax Innovation Center") made hundreds
of hard-sell cold calls pushing the firm's more than 500 tax shelters.
The four schemes examined by Levin's staff earned the firm $1~4
million in fees between 1997 and 2001. KPMG's response? "All
major accounting firms, including KPMG, as well as prominent law
firms, investment advisers, and financial institutions offered
tax advice, including these types of strategies, to clients,"
Philip Weisner, the partner in charge of the firm's Washington
national practice, told the Senate panel. Among the banks that
aided and abetted KPMG's schemes, Levin's subcommittee found,
were NatWest, Deutsche Bank, and UBS.
According to New York Times tax correspondent
David Cay Johnston, tax-exempt entities from Indian tribes to
pension plans to Dutch banks with offices in the West Indies regularly
"rent out" their tax-exempt status to tax cheats, for
a relatively small fee and at virtually no risk to themselves.
In his new book, Perfectly Legal, Johnston traces the tangled
path of a typical scam, where the law, if not technically broken,
was badly bent. In one dodge favored by the super rich, the vehicle
is a small insurance company granted tax-free status to help it
serve rural populations. While the company is only permitted to
collect a few hundred thousand dollars in premiums, there is no
limit on the amount of capital that can be invested in them and
later pulled out, tax-free. Johnston found that one of Wall Street's
richest players, Peter R. Kellogg, used just such a scheme to
avoid more than $190 million in taxes.
Tax avoiders can feel secure that there
is little chance their scams will ever be exposed: Only one in
400 partnerships is ever audited. In 2000 more than $5 trillion
passed through some 7.5 million partnerships, many of them created
solely to save taxes. The IRS audited less than 30,000 of them.
Why? Tax officials have essentially thrown up their hands. "The
IRS was no match for this kind of stuff," says Joseph Guttentag,
who served as deputy assistant treasury secretary in the Clinton
administration. Current and former officials blame the combination
of funding cuts, congressional mandates, and the speed at which
these scams reproduce and mutate. "Recognizing the IRS' diminished
capacity, promoters and some tax professionals are selling a wide
range of tax schemes and devices designed to improperly reduce
taxes to taxpayers based on the simple premise they can get away
with it," wrote former IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti
in his final report to the IRS Oversight Board at the end of 2002.
Hardly a liberal, Rossotti is a Republican who was appointed by
Bill Clinton and served during the first two years of the Bush
administration before joining the Republican merchant bank The
Carlyle Group. He estimated the loss in tax revenue to questionable
partnerships alone to be $100 billion a year.
This laxness is, of course, no accident.
Going easy on tax avoiders benefits what Johnston calls "the
political donor class," whose members overwhelmingly support
Republican candidates. Because investors were among those who
suffered, Congress and the administration responded to the recent
accounting frauds of Enron and others by passing sweeping reform
legislation and increasing funding of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. But when the IRS is cheated, it's only government
that loses revenue.
Since the 1994 Republican takeover, Congress
has consistently squeezed the IRS' budget. Consequently, in the
last decade, the number of IRS employees has dropped by 19,000
overall. The agency was hit disproportionately hard among its
compliance staff. Today it has 21,4Z1 employees, down 28 percent
since l992, while tax avoidance schemes have expanded exponentially.
There is, Rossotti wrote in his final report, "a huge gap
between the number of taxpayers who are not filing, not reporting
or not paying what they owe, and the IRS' capacity to require
them to comply." Today only 1.1 percent of corporations are
audited, down from 3 percent in 1992.
Things got even worse for the IRS' efforts
in 1996, when the newly GOP-controlled Congress held hearings
on abusive practices-not by tax cheats but by the IRS. Witnesses
told tale after tale of abuse by rabid tax police. Ultimately
much of the testimony turned out to be greatly exaggerated or
even false. Still, the few bad eggs that were discovered were
enough to give the GOP an excuse to crack down on the agency.
The 1998 IRS Restructuring and Reform Act mandated that a complaint
against an IRS employee would trigger an investigation that could
lead to dismissal. "The employees felt if they made a tiny
error they would be fired," said Rossotti. The chilling effect
was almost immediate. In 1999, the year after the law took effect,
property seizures dropped 98 percent, levies on bank accounts
fell by three-fourths, and property liens dropped by two-thirds,
according to Johnston.
At the same time, Congress has given the
IRS funding since 1995 to target one class of potential tax cheats,
the working poor, who the agency claimed were costing it more
than $6.5 billion a year due to fraud and mistakes on Earned Income
Tax Credit paperwork. By 2002, with its number of auditors reduced
by one-fourth, the agency spent its precious resources auditing
five times as many people receiving the Earned Income Tax Credit
as the rich, according to Johnston. From a revenue-collecting
standpoint, the move doesn't make much sense: The government can
hope to regain only a few thousand dollars from the vast majority
of these people, most of whom are guilty only of errors, not fraud,
according to reports by the General Accounting Office and the
IRS itself. Still, the penalties for the poor can be harsh: Congress
gave the agency the power to withhold tax credits for between
two and 1o years. That's a far more severe punishment than the
penalties faced by the promoters of illegal tax shelters, who'd
be assessed fines of $ 1,000 for individuals and $10,000 for corporations.
As Senator Levin noted, for the professionals who bilk taxpayers
out of billions of dollars, the deterrence value of those penalties
is effectively zero.
Tax avoiders have another easy strategy
for hiding their profits: booking them in offshore tax havens.
By sheltering profits in tiny nations with no corporate taxes,
such individuals and corporations can avoid being taxed in either
Europe or the United States, costing governments billions of dollars
in lost revenue. In the last two decades, the number of offshore
companies, sham firms, or simply brassplate operations (companies
with no business other than to hide profits) has exploded. In
1983 these offshore tax havens held $200 billion. Today that number
has increased 2s-fold to $5 trillion. The Congressional Budget
Office puts the annual loss to the U.S. Treasury from offshore
tax cheating at $85 billion a year.
In this arena, too, the Bush administration
has been complicit. In 1998, the Clinton administration reached
an agreement with the European Union to crack down on foreign
tax havens and collect hundreds of billions in taxes. The agreement
would have required extensive reporting of transactions to authorities
in the United States and European Union, effectively shutting
down the most flagrant abuses. Almost immediately upon taking
office, Bush officials gutted the program.
A common tax dodge among doctors and lawyers
is to hide income in a tax haven and then access the bank account
via credit card. This is virtually untraceable because the tax
haven's authorities don't report transactions (that's what makes
it a tax haven). IRS subpoenas from MasterCard and Visa found
that between 1 million and 2 million Americans held credit cards
issued by offshore banks. And yet the agency has had the resources
to prosecute only a handful of these cases.
Another dodge is a corporation's fictitious
move offshore. This is legal under existing law, although one
of the country's most respected regulators called it "morally
appalling." The scheme is known in tax jargon as an "inversion"
because it creates a shell company in the offshore jurisdiction
while turning the U.S. company (where the actual headquarters
are located) into a subsidiary. Then the company reaps its profits
in the tax-free jurisdiction while keeping losses in the U.S.
subsidiary. Inversions date back to the 19805, but they became
really popular after Tyco used one in 1997. By 2001, Tyco claimed
that "moving" to Bermuda had saved it $400 million in
tax payments. At the time, Tyco was seen as an innovator, and
the firm's stock price shot through the roof, according to Reuven
Avi-Yonah, an expert on international tax policy at the University
of Michigan Law School. (Of course, the industrial conglomerate
has since come unraveled after a major criminal fraud investigation.)
This dodge was so appealing that a partner at the accounting firm
Ernst & Young wrote in a post-September 1l online sales pitch,
"The improvement on earnings is powerful enough to say that
maybe the patriotism should take a back seat."
The first serious attempt to crack down
on tax havens did not come until the late 1990S, when the problem
of hiding profits offshore had grown out of control. According
a 2001 article in the journal Accounting Today, the U.S. government
received only 340 reports about U.S. accounts in Panama, despite
the fact that most of the 370,000 offshore corporations there
are controlled by U.S. citizens. From the Netherlands Antilles,
which houses 21,000 offshore corporations, the IRS received only
200 reports. "lt started out as flea bites and became the
economic equivalent of smallpox," said Jonathan M. Winer,
former Clinton deputy assistant secretary of state for international
law enforcement. "It's economic and tax piracy."
Recognizing that hundreds of billions
of dollars were being drained from the Treasury Department, the
Clinton administration joined with France, Germany, and Japan
in 1998 to create an ambitious program to crack down on abusive
offshore tax shelters. The effort was made through the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a group of 30
developed nations that tries to promote joint policy through consensus.
The project aimed to stop countries with no real economies, and
with extremely low or zero taxes, from providing havens for multinationals
and rich individuals looking to hide their incomes in purely sham
transactions. As a recent report on tax avoidance issued by the
Friedrich Ebert Foundation, the German Social Democratic think
tank, noted, "Markets have globalized, yet tax structures
have remained largely national.... [T]ax havens allow financial
institutions to outflank the regulation of financial markets in
their home countries."
The OECD project proposed to clamp down
on tax havens by pressuring them to end particularly egregious
tax breaks and forcing them to report financial data. Identifying
35 nations with particularly abusive tax practices, the OECD wanted
to force them to start sharing data on foreign account holders,
to stop permitting paper companies with no economic substance,
to cease giving special tax breaks to foreigners that were not
available to their own citizens, and to desist from cutting secret
deals with individual taxpayers.
The tax havens were understandably resistant,
as such moves would have effectively taken away much of their
appeal. Still, the pressure was so great that some of the most
well-established tax havens, including Barbados and the Cayman
Islands, initially agreed to many of the provisions. The Bush
administration then brought the OECD project to a grinding halt.
The prime mover behind the administration's retreat was a Washington
group called The Center for Freedom and Prosperity, which has
held pro-tax haven rallies around the world, including in Barbados
and Ottawa during the last OECD meeting. Critics call it "the
tax cheats lobby." The group won't reveal its funders, but
it's associated with The Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think
tank that was another major force behind the administration's
decision. (One of the center's founders comes from Heritage, and
the two organizations work in concert with one another on this
issue.)
The groups have powerful friends in Congress,
including Assistant Senate Majority Leader Don Nickles, who sent
a hand-signed letter to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill in February
2001 asking him to drop the project. (The letter was reportedly
written by The Center for Freedom and Prosperity.) House Majority
Leader Dick Armey said that the o E c D project was the work of
the "global tax police." The anti-OECD forces also met
with top Bush economic advisers Glenn Hubbard and Lawrence Lindsey,
as well as Cesar Conda, domestic-policy adviser to Vice President
Dick Cheney, in the spring of 2001. In March of that same year,
they even got the Congressional Black Caucus to weigh in with
a letter to the administration claiming the project would hurt
developing countries.
By May 2001, Secretary O'Neill announced
that the administration was pulling back from the OECD. He was
concerned, he said, "by the notion that lower taxes are naturally
questionable and that one country or a group of countries could
interfere in another country's decision to organize its own tax
system." Without the support of the United States the project
has been floundering. The OECD has dropped most of the requirements
for changing tax practices, leaving only a voluntary information-sharing
component. The project's teeth, which included cutting off noncompliant
tax havens from access to U.S. banks, are gone.
A bipartisan group of former IRS commissioners
wrote in June 2001 to the administration, begging it to change
its stance. Their appeal fell on deaf ears. Legal or not, Republicans
seem plenty happy with the current state of affairs, as long as
it shrinks government. But for Democrats who believe government
has a responsibility to society, the tax-collection issue is vitally
important. Without revenue, there can be no social spending, no
deficit reduction, and no dealing with the crises in health care,
the environment, and education. Republicans seem to have figured
this out. Most Democrats haven't connected the dots.
SAMUEL LOEWENBERG has written for The
Economist, The New York Times, Fortune, Time, and The American
Prospect. He lives in Madrid, Spain.
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