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SCOTUS skeptical that state abortion bans conflict with federal health care law; Iowa advocates for immigrants push back on Texas-style deportation bill; new hearings, same arguments on both sides for ND pipeline project; clean-air activists to hold "die-in" Friday at LA City Hall.

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Offshore Tax Havens Cost Hoosier Taxpayers

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Tuesday, April 19, 2016   

INDIANAPOLIS - According to a new study, nearly three quarters of all Fortune 500 companies use legal techniques to hide income overseas and cut their tax bills.

The Offshore Shell Games report comes from the U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) and Citizens for Tax Justice.

Ana Owens, tax and budget advocate with U.S. PIRG, says out of those 350 or so companies, PIRG was able to figure out how much 56 of them saved.

For just those corporations, the total was $170 billion a year.

"That would be equal to the entire state budgets of California, Virginia and Indiana combined," Owens says. "While everyone is doing their taxes, these multinational corporations are really putting the burden on average Americans."

Some of the firms defend the practices as totally legal, and say they would be foolish not to use the tax shelters when their competitors do.

Anthem, Eli Lilly, Cummins, Steel Dynamics and Calumet Special Products Partners are Indiana companies on the Fortune 500 list.

Owens says many of the corporations are based here and do business here, taking advantage of America's business climate, workforce and consumers. But she says legal fictions allow them to pretend they're making their money overseas.

For example, she says they can set up a shell company in the Cayman Islands and transfer the patents for their most profitable products to that firm.

"Then when they sell that drug or that piece of technology in the U.S., their U.S. company has to pay their foreign subsidiary the licensing fee," says Owens. "On paper they're losing money in the U.S., when really they're just shifting their profits offshore."

Owens says a bill in Congress called the Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act could close many of those loopholes.

She says many people also are pressing for comprehensive tax reform next year, although it is likely to be a struggle. Interest Research Group (PIRG) and Citizens for Tax Justice.


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