NEW YORK
(AP) — Twenty-six big U.S. companies paid their CEOs more last year than they
paid the federal government in tax, according to a study released Thursday by a
liberal-leaning think tank.
The study,
by the Institute for Policy Studies, said the companies, including AT&T, Boeing
and Citigroup, paid their CEOs an average of $20.4 million last year while
paying little or no federal tax on ample profits, according to regulatory
filings.
On average,
the 26 companies generated net income of more than $1 billion in the U.S., the
study said.
The study
blasted tax rules allowing unlimited deductions for CEO
"performance-based" pay, like many stock options. It said the five
biggest performance payers among the 26 companies took $232 million of these
deductions last year.
Among the
"kingpins" it criticized was CEO James McNerney Jr. of Boeing. It
said he got $18.4 million in pay last year while his company received a tax
refund of $605 million.
The study
also laid into Citigroup for paying CEO Vikram Pandit $14.9 million while the
bank received a net $144 million in tax benefits.
Eighteen of
the 26 companies received cash back or credits to apply against tax in the
future, according to the report.
The study,
a 45-page attack on the corporate tax code, said deductions and credits are
allowing companies to lavish big pay packages on executives so they can cut
their tax bills while Washington gets less money in a time of trillion-plus
deficits.
"Our
nation's tax code has become a powerful enabler of bloated CEO pay," the
study said.
To
calculate tax, the study used companies' own math based on accounting rules.
Regulators require companies to estimate their tax bill and disclose it in
public documents for investors.
The tax
filings the companies make to the government, typically in September, are
private and can differ from the estimate.
Another
problem is that the study doesn't count tax the company plans to pay but has
deferred to future years. The authors argue that deferred tax can be put off
indefinitely.
Charles
Bickers, a Boeing spokesman, said that the company's federal tax bill,
including deferred tax, was $1.3 billion last year, not a net credit, as the
think tank's study found.
Boeing did
lower its tax, in part by using a popular tax credit encouraging companies to
spend more on research and development. Bickers said that helped the company
hire 11,000 people in the U.S. last year.
"Boeing
supports a simpler, more competitive tax code. At the same time, we have put
the R&D tax credit to exactly the use it was designed — creating U.S. jobs
in a high-value, advanced technology industry," he said in a statement.
The
Institute for Policy Studies said Boeing would have spent the money on R&D
without the credit.
In addition
to performance-pay deductions and R&D credits, the report criticized the
use of tax havens that allow technology companies, for instance, to assign
intellectual-property rights to shell companies in the Cayman Islands, so they
can run profits through them and avoid taxes. It noted that 26 companies have a
combined 537 subsidiaries in tax-haven countries.
The study
also cited accelerated depreciation on investments, which allow a company to
take deductions for big-ticket purchases in one year, as opposed to over
several years. That cuts taxes in the first year.
The study
said AT&T used accelerated depreciation to save $5.2 billion on its 2011
taxes while paying CEO Randall Stephenson $18.7 million last year.
Sarah
Lubman, an AT&T spokeswoman, said the deductions encouraged the company to
make $20 billion in investments last year. She also said that the deductions
won't be available to take in future years, which should increase taxes.
A Citigroup
spokeswoman noted that the company lost money in 2008 and 2009 and used the
losses to offset taxes on profits this year.
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| CBS |
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