How Apple sidesteps Billions in Taxes
By CHARLES DUHIGG
and DAVID
KOCIENIEWSKI. NYTimes.
RENO, Nev. — Apple,
the world’s most profitable technology company, doesn’t design iPhones here. It
doesn’t run AppleCare customer service from this city. And it doesn’t
manufacture MacBooks or iPads anywhere nearby.
Yet, with a handful of employees in a small
office here in Reno, Apple has done something central to its corporate
strategy: it has avoided millions of dollars in taxes in California and 20
other states.
Apple’s headquarters are in Cupertino, Calif. By
putting an office in Reno, just 200 miles away, to collect and invest the
company’s profits, Apple sidesteps state income taxes on some of those gains.
California’s corporate tax rate is 8.84 percent.
Nevada’s? Zero.
Setting up an office in Reno is just one of many
legal methods Apple uses to reduce its worldwide tax bill by billions of
dollars each year. As it has in Nevada, Apple has created subsidiaries in
low-tax places like Ireland, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and the British Virgin
Islands — some little more than a letterbox or an anonymous office — that help
cut the taxes it pays around the world.
Almost every major corporation tries to minimize
its taxes, of course. For Apple, the savings are especially alluring because
the company’s profits are so high. Wall Street analysts predict Apple could
earn up to $45.6 billion in its current fiscal year — which would be a record
for any American business.
Apple serves as a window on how technology giants
have taken advantage of tax codes written for an industrial age and ill suited
to today’s digital economy. Some profits at companies like Apple, Google,
Amazon, Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft derive not from physical goods but from
royalties on intellectual property, like the patents on software that makes
devices work. Other times, the products themselves are digital, like downloaded
songs. It is much easier for businesses with royalties and digital products to
move profits to low-tax countries than it is, say, for grocery stores or
automakers. A downloaded application, unlike a car, can be sold from anywhere.
Read the entire article. http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/business/apples-tax-strategy-aims-at-low-tax-states-and-nations.html?_r=1&hp&pagewanted=all
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