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For Immediate Release:
12/18/2007
Contact:
Deirdre Cummings, 617-292-4800
Ed Mierzwinski, 202-546-9707
Phineas Baxandall, 617-747-4351
Massachusetts

Massachusetts: MASSPIRG Praises Recommendation to Close Corporate Tax Loopholes

Opposes Linking Proposal to Debate on Corporate Tax Rates

MASSPIRG praised the recommendations of the Special Commission on Corporate Taxes to close tax loopholes, and opposed attempts to link the reform to lowering of the overall corporate tax rate.

The Commission recommended closing a number of loopholes – two critical and long overdue ones are commonly known as Check the Box and Combined Reporting. The Check the Box reform, already in place in 45 states, simply requires that corporations file as a consistent corporate form on both Massachusetts and federal taxes. For example, it prevents companies from declaring themselves a corporation on their federal returns, but as a partnership in Massachusetts.  This reform alone will prevent an estimated $170 million in corporate tax avoidance. “Imagine declaring yourself a married homeowner on your federal tax return and a single renter on your state return, depending on which gets you the better deal,” said Deirdre Cummings, legislative director for MASSPIRG, “most of us think it’s just wrong.  The IRS and Department of Revenue wouldn’t let citizens get away with that kind of shell game; they shouldn’t let businesses either.”

The other loophole-closing reform, called Combined Reporting, is another significant step towards preventing some of the extreme tax avoidance practices going on today, while also serving to eliminate a wide array of potential future loopholes that tax collectors haven’t yet caught onto.

Combined Reporting will put an end to the elaborate shell games that some businesses play with out-of-state subsidiaries, avoiding an estimated $220 million annually in state taxes. These schemes leave in-state businesses that pay their full share of taxes at a competitive disadvantage. Twenty-two states have adopted combined reporting laws, including our neighbors in New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont. Combined Reporting will put an end to tricky tax-avoidance transactions between subsidiaries by requiring affiliated firms to file taxes together and pay taxes based on their combined in-state business activity.

“When multi-state businesses fail to pay their taxes, regular households and companies without high-priced accountants end up picking up the tab,” said Cummings.

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