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| Barack Obama's plan would mean corporations would have to give up dozens of cherished loopholes and subsidies. Photograph: Andrew Harrer/EPA |
President
Barack Obama on Wednesday proposed a lower corporate tax rate and an end to
dozens of loopholes he said helps US companies move jobs and profits overseas.
"It's not right and it needs to change," he said.
The
president wants to lower the US corporate tax rate from the current 35%, the
highest in the world after Japan. Under his plan, manufacturers would receive
incentives so that their effective tax rate could be even lower.
Obama's
election-year plan would set a new 28% corporate tax rate, still higher than
the 25% rate sought by congressional Republicans.
"It's
a framework that lowers the corporate tax rate and broadens the tax base in
order to increase competitiveness for companies across the nation," Obama
said in a statement.
Corporations
would have to give up dozens of cherished loopholes and subsidies that they now
enjoy. Corporations with overseas operations would also face an unspecified
minimum tax on their foreign earnings.
The
proposal outlined by Geithner would also eliminate tax loopholes and subsidies
that Geithner called "fundamentally unfair."
Obama also
would set a minimum tax on the foreign earning of US companies.
Chances of
accomplishing such change in the tax system are slim in a year dominated mostly
with presidential and congressional elections. But for Obama, the proposal is
part of a larger tax plan that is central to his re-election strategy.
Treasury
secretary Timothy Geithner, who rolled out the plan on Wednesday morning,
acknowledged that the debate "will be politically contentious."
"Some
will say these proposals are too tough on business, and others will say that
they're not tough enough," he said.
Obama's
plan would be part of a larger effort to overhaul the US tax system, and it
dovetails with Obama's call for raising taxes on millionaires and maintaining
current rates on individuals making $200,000 or less. But White House spokesman
Jay Carney said Congress could act separately on the corporate tax component of
Obama's overall tax strategy.
Republican
reaction was mixed. House Ways and Means Committee chairman Dave Camp said he
appreciated the administration's plan, though it set a corporate tax rate that
is higher than the 25% he has proposed. He faulted Obama, however, for not
offering a wholesale overhaul of the entire tax system for businesses and
individuals.
"While
this is a good step by the administration, I will borrow from the president's
own words to Congress from just yesterday: 'Don't stop here. Keep going,'"
Camp said in a statement. But seantor Orrin Hatch, the top Republican on the
Senate Finance Committee, dismissed the president's plan as a "set of
bullet points designed more for the campaign trail than an actual blueprint for
fixing our tax code."
While the
35% nominal corporate tax rate ranks among the highest, deductions, credits and
exemptions allow many corporations to pay taxes at a much lower rate.
Under the
framework proposed by the administration, the rate cuts, closed loopholes and
the minimum tax on overseas earning would result in no increase to the deficit.
That means
that many businesses that slip through loopholes or enjoy subsidies and pay an
effective tax rate that is substantially less than the 35% corporate tax could
end up paying more under Obama's plan. Others, however, would pay less while
some would simply benefit from a more simplified system.
Reducing
the corporate tax rate from 35% to 28% would reduce tax revenues by about
$700bn over the next decade, according to an estimate prepared in October by
the Joint Committee on Taxation, the official scorekeeper for Congress.
That means
lawmakers would have to find about $70bn a year in tax increases to keep the
package from adding to the budget deficit, hardly an easy task. In 2010, the
corporate income tax raised a total of $278bn, according to the Internal
Revenue Service. Corporate income taxes have been shrinking as a share of
overall federal taxes for decades. In 2010, corporate income taxes made up just
12% of all federal tax receipts, down from 24% in 1960, according to the IRS.
Geithner
said the Obama plan aims to help US businesses, especially manufacturers who
face strong international competition. Obama's plan would lower the effective
rate for manufacturers to 25% by offering other tax incentives that emphasize
development of clean energy systems.
Many
members of both parties have said they favor overhauling the nation's
individual and corporate tax systems, which they complain have rates that are
too high and are riddled with too many deductions.
The
corporate tax debate has made its way into the presidential contest. Mitt
Romney has called for a 25% rate, Newt Gingrich would cut the corporate tax rate
to 12.5%, and Rick Santorum would exempt domestic manufacturers from the
corporate tax and halve the top rate for other businesses.
While Obama
has been promoting various aspects of his economic agenda in personal
appearances and speeches, the decision to leave the corporate tax plan to the
Treasury Department to unveil signaled its lower priority.
What's
more, the administration's framework leaves much for Congress to decide — a
deliberate move by the administration to encourage negotiations but which also
doesn't subject the plan to detailed scrutiny.
Obama's
plan is not as ambitious as a House Republican proposal that would lower the
corporate rate to 25%.
Still,
Obama has said corporate tax rates are too high and has proposed eliminating
tax breaks for American companies that move jobs and profits overseas. He also
has proposed giving tax breaks to US manufacturers, to firms that return jobs
to this country and to companies that relocate to some communities that have
lost big employers.
Geithner
told a House committee last week that the administration wants to create more
incentives for corporations to invest in the United States.
"We
want to bring down the rate, and we think we can, to a level that's closer to
the average of that of our major competitors," Geithner told the House
Ways and Means Committee.
White House
economic adviser Gene Sperling has advocated a minimum tax on global profits.
Currently many corporations do not invest overseas profits in the United States
to avoid the 35% tax rate.
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