(Reuters) -
Many brand-name U.S. companies are using deductions, credits and other means to
shave their state tax rates below zero percent, a study by a left-leaning think
tank released on Wednesday found.
Dupont and
Intel Corp. are among the Fortune 500 companies that paid no net state income
tax between 2008 and 2010, according to the Institute for Taxation and Economic
Policy.
The study
of 265 corporations that publicly disclose their state and local income taxes
in financial reports found they paid state taxes, on average, of 3 percent on
U.S. profits over the three year period.
The
statutory average state corporate tax rate tops 6 percent.
Sixty-eight
of the companies reviewed paid no state taxes in at least one of the years
studied, the report found.
"Far
too many have managed to shelter half or more of their profits from state
taxes," said Matthew Gardner, executive director of the group, which
advocates eliminating many corporate tax breaks.
The group
attributed the low average rates to trends among states to trim taxes paid in
several ways, from new methods of calculating tax, to breaks in the name of
luring business.
"It is
fair to say that a lot of it is legal activity," Gardner said. "We
don't know for sure the balance between the various causes of tax
reduction."
A Dupont
spokeswoman said the chemicals group "complies with all tax laws and
regulations in every jurisdiction in which it operates."
A spokesman
for Intel was not available for comment.
States are
still recovering from the 2008 financial meltdown, when many legislatures
slashed spending and temporarily raised taxes.
But a tide
of conservative governors took over in 2010, though, and are pushing for big
corporate tax breaks.
Major U.S.
companies often gripe about the top statutory corporate rate on the federal
level, which at 35 percent is among the highest in the world.
At the same
time, companies pay vastly differing rates - depending on whether their
industry enjoys big deductions and credits.
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