Version: 2008

Comments on: Microsoft: Obama's tax plan may hurt U.S. jobs

CEO Steve Ballmer suggests that the president's proposal could prompt companies to shift jobs outside the United States

Add a Comment (Log in or register) Showing 1 of 3 pages (148 Comments)
by gertruded June 5, 2009 2:53 AM PDT
It is easy to guess that Microsoft supports the extreme right wing Republican cause. Welcome to Fox "news" west.
Reply to this comment
by assman June 5, 2009 3:15 AM PDT
Microsoft is a very liberal company, you have no idea what you're talking about. A lot of Microsoft executives openly supported Obama during the campaign and donated to him.

In fact, since 1999, 40% of campaign contributions went to Democrats, only 14% went to Republicans. Source: http://www.campaignmoney.com/microsoft.asp

I mean, come on, they're a Seattle-based company, they are required to be liberal. They have given millions to education programs here and Bill Gates is always contributing big bucks to the schools.
by ausernamenoonehaschosen June 5, 2009 4:43 AM PDT
Why is it then whenever anyone questions the deified Obama, they spew nonsense that always includes "right wing" and "republican" and "Fox News?"
by ausernamenoonehaschosen June 5, 2009 4:49 AM PDT
"they" refers to people like gertruded of course.
by codynews June 5, 2009 5:33 AM PDT
Huh? Microsoft is stating 100% fact. what does "fox news" or "extreme right wing" have to do with anything? You're a nut.

If you make something more expensive, you get less of it. Water seeks it's own level. etc. etc. This isn't hard to understand.

I left California, as my place of primary residence, due to the crazy high taxes. So now they get $0 from me.

When the govt tries to attack everyone with high taxes, it's easy to argue that the result is less taxes as people do what's in their best interest.

That would suck if MS shipped off jobs to avoid having their money stole by Washington but I wouldn't blame them for doing so.
by bj1126 June 5, 2009 5:36 AM PDT
Ballmer and Gates donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Obama and Democrats last election. Both were pretty outspoken advocates of Obama.
by Spartan_458 June 5, 2009 7:28 AM PDT
You're gertruded.

Microsoft and any other for-profit company in existence is all about making money. If they're being taxed more, they're going to do something so that that doesn't affect them as much. It's simple economics. Obama doesn't ever realize what the long term effects of any of these things will have, which is why he's a liberal. Liberalism is all about instant gratification, never the long term effects of that.
by hador_nyc June 5, 2009 7:55 AM PDT
Check out what happened in Delaware over the last year. A year ago, as the economy soured, the state congress enacted a "millionare's tax" on people who eared more than a million dollars and lived there; about 3000-4000 people. This year, they had just over 2000 people filing taxes that qualified to pay that extra tax. Admittedly some of those people who fell off the millionare's level were from the market's tanking, but state legislators admitted that the majority were lost due to people moving their primary residence to another state. The overall impact was that the state collected less money from these people than they would have if they had not leveled the tax. The simple fact is that the more money you have, and the more taxes you can pay, the easier it is for you to move to another state or country to avoid paying those taxes.

This is not Republican, Demorcrat, or other. It's simple math. While it's easy to say when you don't have a lot of money that the "rich" should pay a lot more, the rich, at some point will use their greater means to move away. Honestly, how often have you gone to the local hardware store to support a local small business, as opposed to going to Lowes or Home Depot or one of the majors. This is true with Wallmart, and every other type of store. When you shop at a discount store, you are doing the same thing. Does that make you a Republican; shopping for the best deal? No. That makes you fiscally responsible; something I do not attribute to either party over the last few years.
by protagonistic June 5, 2009 8:08 AM PDT
@ assman

Don't confuse the poor guy with facts that don't jibe with his preconceived notions. I am just amazed that Ballmer has said something I can agree with. Economics courses should be required of every congressional representative. They just can't seem to wrap their head around the idea that the more they tax the more people will find creative ways to get around the taxes. Just wait and see what happens if they ever do pass a VAT. The barter economy will soar. People aren't as stupid as the government seems to think they are.
by technewsjunkie June 5, 2009 8:39 AM PDT
Please go to Move On. You'll fit in there.

Is CNN Liberal?
by Commander_Spock June 5, 2009 8:44 AM PDT
Re: "Ballmer said Wednesday that if Congress enacts President Obama's plans to impose higher corporate taxes, a sensible thing for Microsoft to do would be to move jobs offshore...."

What the heck is Microsoft's Ballmer taking about now when the world knows that it was Microsoft that almost "killed off IBM" (but for the Linux Operating System and the Lotus Development Corporation that Lou Gerstner bought). Which country's executives now have the former IBM's PC Company in their pockets as the result of Microsoft's past dealings with IBM.
See more comment replies
by rmva June 5, 2009 3:52 AM PDT
If Microsoft hasn't already left Seattle because of the atrocious weather, it's hard to see them moving because of a tax issue. They apparently can take a lot of pain.
Reply to this comment
by rnaoncfixd June 5, 2009 9:20 AM PDT
"If deferred taxation is eliminated, it becomes more tempting for a company to move its headquarters from Seattle to Dublin." - Declan McCullagh

DUBLIN!? That's even worse weather.
by Vegaman_Dan June 5, 2009 1:43 PM PDT
Seattle already lost Boeing due to this issue several years ago. The manufacturing plants may be in Washington, but the company is now based in Chicago which has a much lower state tax base.
by PatrickKay June 5, 2009 3:55 AM PDT
Let's start gathering a list of those companies FOR America and those against. I guess we can put Microsoft in the AGAINST category. I'm sorry, I don't put capitalism before country (or people for that matter).
Reply to this comment
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 5:08 AM PDT
Don't be retarded. America IS capitalism. At least, it used to be. Capitalism is the only economic system that allows personal freedom and liberty. And if you have stock in Microsoft, why wouldn't you want the company to do what's in your and its best interest? A LOT of retirement funds have Microsoft stock, so should those hard working Americans whose retirement depends partly on Microsoft hope that the company loses money because you think it's "fair" to tax companies more?

Corporations do not pay taxes. Never have and never will. The consumer of that companies services / products pay that tax. So whenever you hear a politician say we should tax and punish those "evil" corporations, you are in effect asking for a tax increase on the people who consume those products / services.
by codynews June 5, 2009 5:35 AM PDT
Let's make a list of POLITICIANS that are FOR or AGAINST america. Let's make a list of those politicians that make policy/law that forces JOB CREATORS to flee putative taxes.

I guess we can put Obama in the "against" category right?
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:31 AM PDT
Agreed.

I find it interesting that Toyota moved car production to the US while GM moved out out of the US and Toyota came out on top. Apparently keeping your jobs where you sell your product isn't fatal.
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:34 AM PDT
@Endbringer

If corporations don't pay tax on profit like I would (and do) as a citizen, they don't deserve to exist.

The only reason corporations should exist is that they can provide some benefit that I and other business owners who aren't incorporated can't provide.

Oh, and by your logic, you agree wiht the OP since it's a rise in corporate tax that has MicroSoft saying "gee, we can just go overseas".
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:36 AM PDT
@Renegade Knight

I'm not sure I understand your statement "If corporations don't pay tax on profit like I would (and do) as a citizen, they don't deserve to exist. " Corporations do not pay taxes. They will make the profit margin they want and they do that by passing the cost of doing business, including taxes, onto the consumer. Because the taxes will go up, in order to keep their profit margin they'll need to either A) increase the cost of the product or B) move to where the taxes are lower. Microsoft is saying it'll leave is so that it can keep the price of their products the same, which helps the consumer.

And where did you come up with that line about "The only reason corporations should exist is that they can provide some benefit that I and other business owners who aren't incorporated can't provide. " The only reason modern corporations exist is because the Supreme Court in the 1860s created "corporate personhood". They are a construct of the government and exist because of government. Otherwise, they would just be normal businesses.
by cp256 June 5, 2009 1:37 PM PDT
What kind of moron thinks you are FOR a country if you are FOR paying more taxes to an irresponsible government?

Oh, sorry, the answer is obvious! (and the death knell for America)
by pentest June 5, 2009 2:13 PM PDT
"Don't be retarded. America IS capitalism. At least, it used to be. Capitalism is the only economic system that allows personal freedom and liberty"

Don't type that crap and accuse others of being retarded.

Let's look at the abuses of your beloved capitalist system.

Let's look how corporations run the whole damn country.

Let's look how they keep wages down and people poor.

Is capitalism was so wonderful, we wouldn't need to keep moronic businessmen of a tight leash lest our country take a nose dive like we are in now.
by pentest June 5, 2009 2:14 PM PDT
"Corporations do not pay taxes. They will make the profit margin they want and they do that by passing the cost of doing business, including taxes, onto the consumer."

Um how does that jive with capitalism being good.

So they take what they want and f*ck everyone else?

Nice
by tm_anon June 5, 2009 2:31 PM PDT
@Endbringer

How much does it cost MS to print out a disk and a license for that disk? I can tell you now, it's not anywhere near the amount they're asking for it.

Now, how much does it cost to patch that OS? Still doesn't justify the cost of the OS because the price per unit is still exorbitantly high.

MS isn't trying to continue to make ends meet, it continues to try to rake in obscene profits.

There's a reason I use Linux, any cost for my machine depends on me. It cost me $10 for 50 CDs, means I can burn copies of my OS and give them away and it means I can continue to burn the newest release as it comes out. That comes out to $0.20 per CD plus a few pennies for electricity. It cost me a little time at the start to get used to the system but I got that time back by not having so much maintenance to do on my system.

So, we'll say it cost me roughly $0.30 to download and install Linux.

If I can download and install an OS that cheaply, don't you think a corporation as large as MS can do so for even less by now? If they produce at a rate of 500 copies per hour, they still come out cheaper than me. Even putting in packaging, it doesn't cost them $0.30 yet. Throw in the transportation for those units and it may come out to $0.35 and yet the price is how much again?

OEMs pay $15 per license. If I sold my burned copies of my favorite distro for $15 per copy, even if I took the time to go through and check each one, make sure it works properly (which I do anyway), I'd be making a profit of more than 50/1.

That is, I'd be making back $0.50 for every $0.01 that I spent.

Maybe MS can learn to be a not-for-profit business, open up the code for Windows and get rid of most of the bugs. That would solve the problems both for the consumer and for MS. Not-for-profits don't get taxed.
by jabberwolf June 5, 2009 2:59 PM PDT
@pentest

Let's look at the abuses of your beloved capitalist system.
(yeah the USA largest supplier of donated wheat in the world)

Let's look how corporations run the whole damn country.
(as opposed to dictators, fascists, or communist governments ( even china has realized that doesn't work)

Let's look how they keep wages down and people poor.
(its called competition, you are just complaining because you suck at competing and think you deserve as much as someone doing better than you)

That logic, while ideal, is a proven fantasy. Even Lisa Simpson joked about:
'running a land where everyone was equal in every way, but that she'd have to be in charge --well because someone has to'

It doesnt work because it requires the top to make up the slack for the bottom. And the top shrinks while the bottom grows. This isnt opinion but studied fact.

When he calls people who think with retarded opinions rather then actual studies, yes, you do deserve to be called retarded!!
See more comment replies
by kartbart June 5, 2009 4:57 AM PDT
How about a list of politicians FOR America and those AGAINST? Hint: Obama will top those AGAINST based on his foreign apology tour, disdain for American exceptionalism, disdain for American enterprises and disdain for free markets. His policies are remarkably anti- core American values.
Reply to this comment
by pentest June 5, 2009 2:15 PM PDT
Greed is not an American value.

He wasn't apologizing, Faux News just edited it seem that way. Besides, the US has much to apologize for.
by knolte June 5, 2009 5:01 AM PDT
That is so funny it takong everyone this long to realize what few knew and warned about before the election but that what you all get FOR HOPE AND CHANGE.... THANKS FOR TANKING THE USA....
Reply to this comment
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:36 AM PDT
Asking a corporation to pay a fair tax isn't tanking the USA. Corporations who pull the plug and jump ship over the tax on profit. Those same corporations could try the old fashioned method of giving out dividends to their owners and having the owners pay tax (yeah, takes some fancy footwork to pull off but MS has the talent).
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:37 AM PDT
@ Renegade Knight

Corporations do not pay taxes. The consumers do.
by cp256 June 5, 2009 1:38 PM PDT
Keep the Change, please.
by sdf0013 June 5, 2009 5:05 AM PDT
I guess I don't fully understand the idea of removing the deferment - or more specifically the double tax. If MS makes 1,000 EU and have to pay, say 25% (no idea what tax rate would be used for international income) how does that translate into something the US government can use?

1) Should MS start paying that 25% in foreign currency?
2) Does MS simply have to shell out more USD from local profits to pay the tax?
3) Or does this force MS to convert EU to USD?
3a) If that's the case then you get into an semi-arbitrage situation playing on the market of when you convert your currency. Will the US gov designate the rate and specify a bank to conduct the transactions for auditing purposes?
3b) This also means MS would have to basically pay a 3rd tax on the currency exchange. The bank always wants their cut.

I can see why Ballmer said they would be further incentivized to move jobs offshore. It has a double effect. It lowers the employee cost and reduces the foreign tax base.
Reply to this comment
by EricJM001 June 5, 2009 5:22 AM PDT
Our country is drowning in debt. You may not like Obama's plan but it is far better that any Republican plan to cut government spending to the bone (excepting defense) and watch public education decline and runaway heath-care and energy costs destroy wealth and opportunity with far greater efficiency.

The time has come to balance the budget, I'm ready to do my part, and Microsoft should be ready to do theirs as well. The party is over and it's time to pay the bill. We need to cut spending where it makes sense, raise taxes on everyone (and I mean everyone) and balance the damn budget. Until then any economic prosperity with be fleeting at best.
Reply to this comment
by bj1126 June 5, 2009 5:35 AM PDT
Higher taxes also mean no economic prosperity.

Oh and I am so sick of the public education funding nonsense. We spend more per child on education than any other country in the world and our education system still sucks. It's time to realize there are deeper problems here than just throwing money at it.
by codynews June 5, 2009 5:37 AM PDT
Raising taxes and running out income creators and jobs will do just the opposite of what you want.

I want to balance the budget too... You should be pretty upset that Obama is spending at levels never every seen in the history of mankind.

Cody
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 5:47 AM PDT
What's wrong with you? Raise taxes? The US government takes in more money than the majority of the world's country's GDPs. We are already taxed over 50% of our incomes as it is when you include the embedded taxes in everything you buy (23%), income tax (average of 20%), federal gas tax ($0.184 a gallon), federal taxes on tobacco, state and local sales tax (8% average), property taxes, and the list goes on. Then there's all the "fees" to just to exist, like storm water fees, fees to get copies, fees to build a home, office, garage, tree house, fees for car tags, fees for business licenses, drivers licenses, ID cards, court fees, etc.

You say Obama's plan is better than the Republican plan? Obama is wanting to spend more than every single President and Congress in the 233 year history of the republic COMBINED during his first 5 months in office! And that does not even include his unconstitutional government run health care, nor does it include the pyramid scheme known as Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. He's destroying the United States, pure and simple. The republicans aren't any better as their answer to fiscal discipline is to cut a measly $23 billion out of $3.8 trillion. But it least it's more than the $100 million Obama proposed to cut.

I'd still like to know where in the Constitution it gives the federal government the authority to run the education system. Seems like the 9th and 10th amendment prohibit that, but then again it's only a document that allows us pleebs to watch porn and Youporn, right?
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 9:01 AM PDT
I don't see anything in those which prevent the government from providing a non-compulsory education system. You are perfectly free to send your kids to a private school or home school them and they can take exams for any recognised qualifications. It's not _the_ education system, it's /an/ education system.

You've also demonstrated exactly what happens when income and corporate taxes are lowered, they're just imposed on everything else in a non-means-tested indescriminate manner so the true taxes end up the same for a millionnaire as for a poor man.

What other people have also demonstrated is that the rich are good at tax dodging, although it's something anyone self-employed can do. Raised or not, these people are dodging the taxes anyway so raising or lowering the tax isn't going to make any difference to them. I've seen millionnaires who manage to claim an income of only £5,000, these rises aren't going to touch them. It's the people who make these high amounts on payroll who have to pay and unless they're working from home they'll find it very difficult to just move elsewhere.

What's also true is that it that these people don't want to pay _any_ tax so if they're going to be fiddling the figures then they're doing it already. This makes no difference.

I've also been reading interesting articles on the fallacy of offshoring. The USA has an extraordinarilly skilled workforce which will be difficult to find elsewhere. It's already been pointed out that US corporations are supposedly taxed quite heavily (even though MS has reportedly paid absolutely no tax whatsoever in some years eg http://crosscut.com/2008/02/02/microsoft/11167/ ) and yet the jobs are starting to move back because offshoring, to a country where you don't know the people or who's good to work with, often produces such poor results that fixing them can cost more than just keeping work in house.

This is, as always, the cry of corporations the world over, the CBI and others, constantly demanding less 'burndensome' regulation and they got it. We're in the middle of the result right now.

Here's a quick analysis of how the sucking-up-to-corporations worked in the UK (warning, coarse language) http://cuntsarestillrunningtheworld.wordpress.com/2009/05/08/stop-me-if-you-think-that-youve-heard-this-one-before/

These same people who keep going on about Obama needing economics lessons are the same people who thought the hyperinflated economy was going to keep expanding forever (I've been warning people this was coming for years but would they listen?). The first law of economics is the same as the first law of Newtonian Gravity and just like gravity, pretending it isn't there doesn't make it go away. The only way to keep the economy strong is to enforce corporate responsibility and regulate just enough that unsafe practices are kept in check. It's what kept the economy stable after the Depression right until those regulations were removed in the '90s and just look at the result of that.

As someone pointed out above, Toyota moved production _to_ the USA but it's GM who needed the bail-out. See if you can find out why.
by cp256 June 5, 2009 1:43 PM PDT
I just can't help it.

STUPID LIBERALS!
by rcrusoe June 5, 2009 5:24 AM PDT
Of course higher corporate taxes will hurt jobs, etc.

When governments tax companies, they have to either pass the cost of the tax to their customers in the form of a higher cost for their product, or offset the cost by cutting something else.

In Microsoft's case, they are already the most expensive game in town so moving jobs is a logical move for them.

Corporations exist to make money for their shareholders - period. If they don't offer a better return on investment than "the other guy" then people won't invest their money. And, in this case, if people don't invest in MS, then MS will cease to exist.

Apparently no one in the government took Economics 101 or they would know this.
Reply to this comment
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:40 AM PDT
Your talking Economics 101, when you don't seem to understand highschool economics and math.

Governments tax profit (unless they are corrupt). There is no increased cost to pass on to the consumer. Just less profit. However since MS doesn't pay dividents and their stock price is flat, that profit isn't benefiting the shareholders either. Oh and MS doesn't sell new shares all the time. They need to be authorized. Sharholders have already invested their money. IF they "pull the plug" MS doesn't quit existing their stock price goes down to a level where the new investors feel MS may do them some good.
by kevinskrause June 5, 2009 10:29 AM PDT
@ Renegade

Who needs to ?pull the plug?? When Obama?s administration raise long and short-term capital gains tax to a flat 45% across the board, liquidity will die and Microsoft stock will become worthless. Who needs investors for capitalism to thrive? It seems our fate has already been decided.
by fgsdfgdsfgdsfg June 5, 2009 6:00 AM PDT
one thing everyone here seems to forget is that Microsoft has shareholders to answer to. Share holders care about one thing only, PROFITS! and if Microsoft can increase profits by moving overseas and no longer being an American company, than they have an obligation to shareholders to do it.

Personally rather than calling MS a right wing fox news based company, (which couldn't be further from the truth) we should be questioning the tax policies that have lead us to this point.

American companies are at a disadvantage when competing in the global economey because of our tax code. As a result Americans are losing jobs by the half million every month as those jobs go overseas. Americans will continue to lost jobs and our economey will continue to suffer as long as our tax code makes it less costly to work in Ireland than New York.
Reply to this comment
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 9:12 AM PDT
You mean the policies that mean if MS record all their sales in Nevada they don't pay any tax on them at all? Like those policies?
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 9:13 AM PDT
PS. MS and Intel are likely to be pulling out of Ireland, not because the tax breaks may end but because they can't get trained staff.

Seriously.
by drfrost June 5, 2009 10:45 AM PDT
Yes yes odubtaig, Microsoft, like pretty much every corporation in America, does everything they legally can to minimize their taxes. They still pay far more corporate taxes here than they would in most other democratic nations.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 1:50 PM PDT
I doubt that.
by m_rogerholmes June 5, 2009 6:09 AM PDT
There are some people in business who seriously feel that any taxes imposed on business by government must be unfair to business. Mr Balmer, like the gentleman who co foundered Microsoft, is welcome to a personal oppinion, but, business is just as liable to fair and reasonable tax by government as us ordinary folks.
Reply to this comment
by drfrost June 5, 2009 10:41 AM PDT
How would you like it if the government decided to double tax part of your income? Lets say you lived in Texas but owned some property in Oklahoma. All of sudden, Oklahoma decides you have to pay Oklahoma state income tax on the income you're earning in Texas because you have property in Oklahoma. Would you think that was fair and reasonable?
by stubbyns June 5, 2009 6:30 AM PDT
If they don't want to pay taxes in the US, then they shouldn't be allowed to do business in the country. It's easy. People first.
Reply to this comment
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 9:15 AM PDT
I like your style.
by kevinskrause June 5, 2009 10:33 AM PDT
Yes, it's as easy as supply and demand. So how do you plan to convince the "People" to stop demanding Microsoft's products?
by drfrost June 5, 2009 10:39 AM PDT
They don't mind paying taxes. They just don't want to be forced out of business because they can't compete against foreign competitors. This is not about love of country. This is about survival in a global economy. The US already puts companies here at an extreme disadvantage as it is. Our corporate tax rate is one of the highest in the world.

Read what I'm about to say and try to understand it:

America has to compete for businesses in a global economy.
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:42 AM PDT
They aren't saying they don't want to pay taxes. What they're saying is the taxes are already high enough and if the government increases the tax rate, then they'll have to do something to offset that cost.
by chrisachille June 5, 2009 7:00 AM PDT
At the end of the day the US is a captialistic society, one which flourishes from individuals going out and trying to do the best they can making a great living at it.

Microsoft has done great in this over the years, better than most, and consequently some look up to what they have done, and some hate them for it. But since they did go public years ago, they are accountable to their share holders, and also to their employees. If the US is going to do things that make it a lot less favorable to do business in this country, then I think it is a good idea for them to bring it to the administrations attention. I love when people argue that because someone wants to share their point of view on something, that this is unAmerican, I just don't get that.

Personally I think it is too high a price for an entity to have to pay taxes for two seperate/unrelated tax systems. I would point out that for personal income tax, when an employee works in one state and lives in another, that they are required to pay the effective higher of the two taxes. Not the combined tax for those two states, that would be unreasonable for them, and it is unreasonable for a business to do also.
Reply to this comment
by BIGELLOW June 5, 2009 7:17 AM PDT
I think the point a lot of people are missing here is patriotism. Country loyalty. Imagine, for instance, if America were a wife, and Microsoft were the husband. Then, the conversation went something like this. Microsoft says, "My wife is now sick and the medical bills are piling up. It is now more worth it to me to leave my wife and pay her alimony and to marry a healthier wife than it is for me to stay with my sick wife."

That is absurd. Just because LOGIC may dictate something to be true does not mean the logical thing is always the RIGHT thing. Much too often, the logical thing is the wrong thing to do. This shows how little Microsoft cares for the country that has fostered its ability to grow to the size it has globally. I understand that Microsoft has a duty to its shareholders... but it doesn't have a duty ONLY to its shareholders. If its shareholders all say Microsoft should sell ham sandwiches on every street corner, this does not mean Microsoft should blindly obey. Many Microsoft shareholders also live in the United States, so Microsoft shouldn't ONLY be concerned about stock price... but about how they treat the U.S., regardless of their difference of opinion of certain policies.

Microsoft is threatening desertion, here. Plain and simple. This is getting awfully close to corporate terrorism. In an economic sense, Microsoft is saying "If you take away even a sliver of our power, we will fly planes into your economy." It's a corporation that has no loyalty to people, but only to the dollar... to power itself.
Reply to this comment
by Cobralord June 5, 2009 7:28 AM PDT
Its not patriotic to pay more taxes. You do recall the circumstances under which this country was formed right? Our Supreme Court has said that we have the right to use every lawful means to avoid paying taxes.
Of course there's also no law saying you can't pay more, so if you think its patriotic to pay more taxes, why don't you not claim any deductions on your taxes, or tax credits, and sign over your whole check to the IRS.
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:43 AM PDT
@Cobralord

It's patriotic to pay yoru fair share. It's also patriotic to work to fix a broken system. Our tax system needs work, but notbody should shirk their share in the meantime. I know some rich folks who work hard to bilk the government out of tax collections. Then they complain about someone on welfair for being a burden. They don't see the irony.
by Cobralord June 5, 2009 10:02 AM PDT
@ RK

Oh yeah, and who determines "fair share"?
If the "rich" from your example are doing everything lawfully, they've got every right to complain about welfare recipients. If they're cheats like Tim Giethner and Charlie Rangle, they should be in jail. In Massachusetts they're giving cars and AAA memberships to welfare recipients. I've got to pay for my car and AAA membership. How is that fair? My wife and I had to pay $1000 a month in rent, when the guy across the hall had the same size apartment but only had to pay $25 a month (and didn't pay that either) because he got Section 8 aid. That fair? No.
One person, one vote, one tax rate. No loopholes, no dodges, and everyone pays.
When you've got cities like New York where 40,000 people out of nearly TEN MILLION pay more than 50% of the income taxes you've got a real problem.
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:49 AM PDT
It is NOT patriotic to pay "your fair share". That term bugs the hell out of me. Who determines the "fair share"? The government? The majority at the expense of the minority? The only way to tax fairly is for the FairTax to be implemented. That would keep companies and corporations from moving offshore to avoid the second highest corporate tax rate in the world. That would also be an immediate $350 BILLION a year stimulus because that's how much is costs currently to just comply with the tax code. It's ridiculous that we have to pay to pay taxes because those nimrods in control made the system so complicated even they can't comply with it. The poor would pay NO taxes and the rich would be paying more since they purchase more expensive items. Even the drug dealers and illegals would be paying taxes.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 1:57 PM PDT
"In Massachusetts they're giving cars and AAA memberships to welfare recipients."

Oh, I'd looove to see the evidence for that. Typical anti-taxation argument, utter fabrication. You read like my uncle, he's a racist *********** too. Laziest bastard I've ever had to share a room with. Only reason we can figure my aunt married him is because she can't have children and in those days she settled for what she thought she could get.

Try to keep your arguments based in reality and not the tabloid ******** of the Murdoch empire.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 1:59 PM PDT
"the guy across the hall had the same size apartment but only had to pay $25 a month"

Bull ****.
by nachurboy June 5, 2009 10:49 PM PDT
@odubtaig

""In Massachusetts they're giving cars and AAA memberships to welfare recipients."

Oh, I'd looove to see the evidence for that."

http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/2009_05_07_Free_cars_for_poor_fuel_road_rage/srvc=home&position=also
by Cobralord June 5, 2009 7:22 AM PDT
Well Stevie, it looks like all that money you poured into the Obama campaign is really paying off for ya now. And you'd think that picking up the tab for his inauguration would be worth something.
Steve, might be a genius when it comes to software and business, but you sure don't understand leftist politics. To the leftist, you're the evil greedy capitalist who got everything he has on the backs of the masses, and its up to the leftist to return those ill-gotten gains back to their "rightful" owners.

It also doesn't help matters that the US has the highest corporate tax in the Western World, and when you add state and local taxes, trying to do business in the US is becoming more difficult. Especially when you take into account all the runaway spending that the Feds and State governments are trying to get away with. Somebody has to pay for it, oh your (you the reader) tab to date is about $530,000 and growing. By the time the statists are through with you, you'll be hoping you still have some change in your pockets.
Reply to this comment
by drfrost June 5, 2009 11:02 AM PDT
Finally someone who understands the situation. If you can't compete in a global economy, you're going to fail. Doesn't matter if you love this country. Love of country is not going to pay the mortgage on your warehouse (and the chinese own that mortgage)! If your competitor from Japan is making the same product at half the price because his taxes are half of yours.... guess what? If he's improving his product faster because he can afford to dump more into research because his tax rate is half of yours, guess what? If labor laws have forced you to provide big retirement packages to all your employees and your competitor doesn't have to do that, guess what?

Obama is going to put these businesses in a situation where they have to leave to survive. The fact that he doesn't understand this is staggering.
by llungster June 5, 2009 7:23 AM PDT
What's MS going to say? "We love higher taxes? Bring it on!" ???? If a person was asked to pay more taxes, they'd say the same thing.

This should be no surprise coming from any large corporation (regardless of the traditional liberalism of MS), especially in these economic times. It'd be no different coming from any number of other sources (corporate or Fox News :) ). I question why this is even "news" worthy of reporting.
Reply to this comment
by drfrost June 5, 2009 11:41 AM PDT
You would think this sort of news wouldn't garner much response but I find the type of responses very illuminating. Apparently many people seem to think it's unamerican to try to legally minimize your taxes.... One wonders what they think of our founding fathers and what they did to decrease their tax burden.

They also don't seem to understand that many American businesses are failing because the tax and political situation here makes them less than competitive in the global market, and what Obama has proposed is only going to make that worse.

It's sort of like a new CEO coming into GM and saying "Let's just double the price of all our cars. That will fix our financial problems!" Increasing your products price tag can actually lead to a decline in your revenue. The same is true for tax rates. People need to understand why this is true. Obama needs to understand why this is true.

It used to be that we were by far the best choice when corporations were considering a base of operations. This is simply no longer the case. We can't expect to be charging such a large premium when our "product" is no longer superior to many of our competitors.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 2:02 PM PDT
That was taxation without representation. This is taxation _with_ representation.

Don't try and make this something magnanimous by bringing the founding fathers into this, it's not the same thing at all.
by lang0502 June 5, 2009 7:26 AM PDT
U.S. Coporate taxes are already generally twice as high as Netherlands and Ireland (you can't compare directly because companies in the U.S. have federal tax and state tax to deal with).

A better plan is to cut corporate taxes. It reduces the incentive for companies to lie about their income, so it won't necessarily reduce money the government takes in. It's better to tax employees than the company - this makes the company create jobs. Employees are also less likely to move to another country for the sole purpose of seeking lower payroll taxes (especially since the U.S. already charges one of the lowest tax rates in the world for personal income).
Reply to this comment
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:48 AM PDT
A better plan is to revise the tax system. Less loopholes and deductions. If copany lies about their income that just means they have accountants who need to hiave their lisence to practice pulled.

It's fair to tax profit, even though everone does seem to like sticking employees with all the tax. You have no idea how badly you are screwed over because you can't run or hide (and apparently don't vote since your elected reps are doing the selling out).

When a town gives a company incentives to come there and create jobs (so they can later say "gee, raise my tax and I'll pull those jobs I promised and move them ovesees) all the citizens of that town pay. They do this in the form of payng for water, sewer, power, guranteed income, roads, land donations, special tax districts and such.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 9:25 AM PDT
"U.S. Coporate taxes are already generally twice as high as Netherlands and Ireland"

Yes, and per my comment above, Intel and MS are having serious trouble finding educated employees. There's also terrible poverty in Dublin and no jobs. I wonder, has anyone ever suggested a connection between poverty, high unemployment, underfunded education systems and an inability to find staff with a decent education?

Thanks once again for accidentally arguing for higher taxes and point out that MS threaten to go where the taxes are lower while thinking of pulling out of Ireland as a result of problems caused partly by such low taxation.
by drfrost June 5, 2009 11:12 AM PDT
Odubtaig, there are many MANY places for MS to go where they'll have no trouble finding trained personnel and the taxes are much lower. And not all companies need trained personnel.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 2:04 PM PDT
Like? Where? If these places are so good, why was Ireland so attractive in the first place (that is, until all the poverty and underfunding of education left them with no workforce)?

Think it through.
by Brian Grover June 5, 2009 7:28 AM PDT
First of all, I apologize for the long rant here. What I am writing below is, of course, just my personal opinion.

I don't get all of the "Un-American" attitude that is out there. Because I want to keep more of my hard earned money for myself and my family instead of giving it to a wasteful government, I am Un-American?

I have thought about this and I think that everyone should be responsible to pay their own taxes themselves. Self Employed people do this as they have to pay quarterly anyway, but I am saying let W-2 employees be responsible also. Not only make people pay their own income taxes, but also make people responsible for paying all other taxes also (Sales Tax, Use Tax, etc.) instead of having it be part of the transaction. The government likes the automatic collection/withholding of taxes because it reduces non-compliance, but the side effect is that people don't really *know* how much they spend in taxes.

If everyone had to cut a check to government (local, state and federal) every three months for taxes that were due (Federal, State, Local, Sales Tax, Local Tax, Gasoline Taxes, etc.), I think people would realize just how much of their hard earned money goes to the government. I also believe that once people did realize, there would probably be either another revolution or we would be seeing a whole bunch of elected officials not re-elected unless they took action to lower the tax burden or were more transparent in how the collected money is spent.
Reply to this comment
by Renegade Knight June 5, 2009 7:50 AM PDT
Ignoring that it's a bad system for exactly the reasons you pointed out. It would also make people angry at all the loop holes, deductions and tax fraud perpatraded by corporations. It would also make people agry at everone who didn't pay their fiar share since those entities (corporations included) who don't raise evereone elses tax as a result.
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:54 AM PDT
@ Renegade Knight

Once again you use the term "fair share". That cannot be defined and codified into law, so why use that term?
by drfrost June 5, 2009 11:28 AM PDT
Renegade Knight:

First off, no one is accusing Microsoft of tax fraud. Don't suggest Microsoft is breaking the law without presenting any evidence. Not only is it morally repugnant, it also happens to be illegal.

Second, I'd bet a pretty penny they pay a higher tax rate than you do. If you think this still isn't "fair" then we're going to have to disagree on what qualifies as "fair."
by spk51 June 5, 2009 7:32 AM PDT
Does Microsoft manufacture any of their software or gadgets in America?
Reply to this comment
by LunnarPink June 5, 2009 7:52 AM PDT
Why does anyone feel sorry for Microsoft? They have been making billions of dollars. Bush gave them so many tax breaks, which is one of the reasons we are where we are today. I think it's time for these big corporations to stand up and help support our country. Instead of worring how many billions they will be making this year.
Reply to this comment
by Cobralord June 5, 2009 10:04 AM PDT
Maybe if the members of the Obama administration and the Democrats hadn't been so busy giving themselves tax breaks (by not paying taxes at all!) and paid their fair share, we wouldn't be in this mess.
by Endbringer June 5, 2009 10:55 AM PDT
I think you're confused. Bush lowered tax rates and the government's revenue INCREASED. Learn your facts before you say things like that.
by drfrost June 5, 2009 11:13 AM PDT
Endbringer has it right. Bush lowered taxes, made our corporations more competitive in a global market and sales went up.
by odubtaig June 5, 2009 2:08 PM PDT
Sooo, even if Bush won, he was going to end all the tax breaks he introduced that are being ended by Obama instead because revenue went up?

You guys are arguing out of your *********! The tax breaks are ending because the USA CANNOT AFFORD THEM ANYMORE. They were based on INFINITE GROWTH and now THERE IS A RECESSION.

I want to see numbers here! Especially from anyone claiming anything about 'welfare queens'.
by pentest June 5, 2009 2:17 PM PDT
"Bush lowered tax rates and the government's revenue INCREASED."

You really are retarded.

Let's look at the ending balance of Jan 11, 2001 and compare it to Jan 11, 2009.

Moron.
by biffhenerson June 5, 2009 7:55 AM PDT
Obama is a wolf in sheep's clothing. A trojan horse. He will destroy America while always presenting a pleasant smile. He is an angry, bitter man inside. A socialist stuck in a democracy. He will make it more expensive for a company to be headquartered in the USA. This will cause the company to seek a different country to call home. I suppose he could buy them and keep them in the USA. Lol! If he is trying to collect more taxes, he should start with his friends, family and those close to him. They seem to be the biggest violators of the law. The corporations in question are following the tax law.
Reply to this comment
Showing 1 of 3 pages (148 Comments)
advertisement

15 sites that went kaput in 2009

Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.

Top 10 news stories of the decade

Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.

About Politics and Law

News at the intersection of technology, politics, and law, ranging from intellectual property to censorship to tech policy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Politics and Law topics

advertisement
advertisement