I'm talking about 2009. They paid lots of taxes in 2009. In fact, their taxes exceeded their profits in 2009.
Well, now I'm confused about what year you're talking about then, because you're not being very clear with your wording. You stated:
Wow... Now, let's look at the facts pulled from their latest annual report.
Their latest annual report filed with the SEC was for the 2010 tax year. My references were to what was paid for the 2009 tax year, and their report which indicated that no income taxes were owed.
So either you're talking about their latest annual report like you initially stated, which would be 2010, or you're talking about their 2009 annual report, but it can't be both.
I generally agree... But, don't believe for one second that they are still not paying significant taxes. They may not be paying corporate income tax, but they still paid an exhorbatant amount of taxes compared to their actual earnings.
Sure, they do usually pay an exorbitant amount of taxes in other areas. But I was more or less focusing on income tax. And so was the discussion. The "corporate tax rate," which we've been discussing for the vast majority of this thread, is the
income tax rate for corporations. It doesn't include payroll taxes, sales taxes, use taxes, or anything else; it's an income tax on corporations.
So when you suggested that the effective
corporate tax rate of Exxon was 47% based on
all of the taxes they paid, you're incorrect. And when you compare the corporate tax rate of corporations in one country to the average rate of
all types of taxes paid by corporations in America, you're comparing two different numbers and types of taxes.
In order to pay no income tax, or even a significantly small amount of income tax, you have to reduce your taxable income. If you're a multi-million dollar corporation, this means you have to reduce millions (or even billions) of dollars of gross income in order to reach a taxable income of $0 (or reach a significantly small taxable income amount). Being able to do so just goes to show that the tax code and the vast number of deductions are a little absurd, and far too complex.
No... If you're going to use pure comparisons of corporate tax rates amongst various countries as a percentage of GDP, you simply cannot make a reasonable comparison with countries that do not recognize or support pass-through entities. If the vast majority of their economic activity is conducted by corparate structures, those statistics cannot be compared with similar statistics in the United States as the majority of our employers typically fall into pass-through entity structures.
Sure, I see your point there. But yet again, the second chart reinforces what the first chart concludes. Even when you go outside of corporate tax rates, the amount of general taxes collected as a percentage of GDP is far higher in other countries than it is here.
Fair enough... You're technically correct, but I would still be inclined to take the 2000 largest corporations as an adequate subset of which to compare global corporate taxation. We're not talking 2000 of the US's corporations compared to all corporations of other countries. This is an apple-to-apple comparison of global taxation on the Forbes Global 2000 list. We're not comparing Exxon to Pedro's Tiki Bar.
To use your own argument against you, if there are countries that have more corporations because they don't utilize pass through entities, then doesn't that skew the results in your study just as much as it did mine?
Additionally, we have to look at the number of corporations that "represented" each country. The study used 484 American corporations, and 1,336 corporations from 58 countries. This means that, on average, the other countries were represented by 23 corporations each. It's not a "similar to similar" comparison unless you have a similar number of corporations evaluated from each country.
Further, what if many of these other countries have a flat tax rate? While their top 23 corporations may pay less in taxes than American corporations, their smaller corporations are paying the same tax rate as the big corporations. But in America, the smaller corporations generally pay less due to the progressive tax structure that we have, so ultimately America's average tax rate for corporations may very well be lower.
Last but not least, were studies done on the other countries to see how corporate tax rates were structured and how they were affected? Maybe the top four earning corporations in Cambodia paid less in taxes than 300 of America's top earning corporations, but what did the fifth ranked Cambodian corporation pay? Or the tenth? Could they have paid higher percentages than those corporations which were ranked higher then them? With an average of 23 corporations per country, there's simply not a large enough pool to get meaningful numbers regarding average tax rates, especially when you're comparing them to 484 American corporations.
Stop your whining... Again, it was a comparison of similar-to-similar. If you can't see that, it's not my problem.
Don't be so grumpy. It's not my fault you decided to incorrectly use the term "average," and then later corrected your terminology after you were called out on it.