NY Times Apple Tax Article Flawed
bonch writes "Forbes contributer Tim Worstall points out that the NY Times article claiming Apple pays less than 10 percent of its profit in taxes was based on a flawed assumption of the corporate tax system. The 9.8% figure came from Greenlining Institute, who compared Apple's 2011 profits to taxes calculated according to 2010 profits. In the corporate tax system, estimated quarterly tax payments are made based on the previous year's profits until actual profits are calculated at the end of the trading year, when the balance is then paid to the IRS."
Saying NYT made an incorrect calculation and explaining why is fine. But what was Apple's tax rate, then?
If you can't answer that, then you can't say the figure itself is incorrect, only the means used to arrive at it.
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
Lately, I've seen lots of tabloid-esque headlines at Forbes supposedly drumming up controversy. I read the article and realize I was trolled. I think that magazine is not going to be around much longer.
Forbes didn't even read the original article. This doesn't apply at all to Apple putting business locations in other states like Nevada to avoid paying California taxes. This only addresses half of the issue, the Federal business tax rate that Apply pays.
sudo make me a sandwich
It's not nearly enough. These people (er i mean corporations) should be paying taxes just like other people. Last year I paid 28%. Sound good, Apple?
Whoops. Well, I'm sure Slashdot's comments to the previous article were totally reasonable.
"Sufferin' succotash."
OK, so if you follow a link in TFA and manage not to balk at an even more inflammatory headline, you get to Mr. Worstall's claim that http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2012/04/18/apples-9-8-tax-rate-entirely-mind-gargling-nonsense/">Apple paid approximately 24.2%, 24.4% and 31.8% for 2011, 2010 and 2009, respectively -- which doesn't really answer the question of what they paid in 2012 but does explain why a figure of 9.8% sounds unreasonable.
[Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
When I first read the headline I thought the "Apple tax" was that of common parlance, e.g. the overpriced hardware, the $99 iOS developer fee, etc. I had to reread it once I started to read the summary.
Occasionally living proof of the Ballmer peak.
You didn't read the article. If you had, you'd have seen the link to Forbes' previous article on the alleged tax rate, where it explains how Greenlining Institute's 9.8% figure takes into account the tax dodges you're talking about.
Why can't I pay off expenses before taxes are levied? I want to pay my rent, student loans, food, electricity, etc with pre-tax money. Regardless of what Apple pays, it still feels unfair (even if there are good reasons for it being the way it is, it FEELS unfair).
-SaNo
Saying NYT made an incorrect calculation and explaining why is fine. But what was Apple's tax rate, then?
If you can't answer that, then you can't say the figure itself is incorrect, only the means used to arrive at it.
Are people dense today?
Apple's effective tax rates were approximately 24.2%, 24.4% and 31.8% for 2011, 2010 and 2009, respectively. Apple is a public company, remember? They report these things to their shareholders annually.
How did your post get +5 Insightful? Apple's report is linked right in the article!
What the hell? If the means used to arrive at a figure is wrong, then the figure is wrong. What kind of ass-backwards logic is this, where the figure can still be right even if the means used to calculate the figure is wrong...? Seriously, that's one of the weirdest, dumbest things I've ever seen.
Apple already reports its tax rates in its shareholder filings. Their 2011 tax rate was 24.2%.
Truth hasn't had anything to do with American politics for a long time.
It's the world's biggest lying contest, and the winner gets the White House.
That a successful company is viewed by many as a cash cow for government indicates a diseased thought process that assumes primacy of government over freedom and the economic might that derives from freedom.
In short, it's putting the cart before the horse. An overloaded cart with fused axels and square wheels.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
According to Wikipedia NY Times is a reputible source and thus is "the truth". Sorry Apple, no original research here.
Tax Accountant Here - Whoever wrote the Forbes article is patently wrong. Large corporations like Apple cannot base all of their current year's estimated tax payments on their prior-year's tax liability (See Section 6655(d)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code), only their first quarter's estimated payment. Apple's 2011 Form 10-K shows that their current tax expense (the amount of cash taxes paid or payable on 2011 profits) was $5,415,000,000. They also have a deferred tax expense (taxes that have economically accrued on 2011 earnings but that aren't due until certain events occur in the future) of $2,868,000,000. Their total tax expense for 2011 was $8,283,000,000 on pre-tax profits of $34,205,000,000, an effective tax rate of 24.2%. They were able to "save" about $3.9 billion in taxes by keeping profits generated in foreign countries parked outside of the USA. Other tax savings came from utilization of the Research & Development tax credit ($167 Million) and the Domestic Production Activities Deduction ($168 Million).
Very useful if you are trying to tell a story. NYT so I have no doubt this was deliberate propaganda.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Wow, you must suck at doing your taxes. If you're paying the full rate you should invest in something called "TurboTax." It's a software program that helps you file and do your taxes. It also suggests tax deductions you might want to take, etc.
What you're doing is saying "I'm dumb and other people aren't - those other people should be penalized." That's patently unfair. Why should other people get penalized for your stupidity?
Wow, you must suck at doing your taxes. If you're paying the full rate you should invest in something called "TurboTax." It's a software program that helps you file and do your taxes. It also suggests tax deductions you might want to take, etc.
What you're doing is saying "I'm dumb and other people aren't - those other people should be penalized." That's patently unfair. Why should other people get penalized for your stupidity?
I shouldn't have mentioned my tax rate. The point was, your insults aside, corporations should pay as much as people, since they are people, asshole. ;)
I'm sticking to pears.
Have gnu, will travel.
In order for your account to be even remotely plausible as a genuine commenter and not a sockpuppet, you need to make an effort to comment in stories that do not also contain a bonch comment.
We are not idiots, you dumbfuck.
A Slashdot account that has posted once in 4 years suddenly becomes a tax accountant parroting Apple's figures? Too obvious!
The tax rate calculation is based on money set aside for taxes ("provision"), not actually money paid. Also, the values used by Forbes for "taxes paid" are from 2009, so they also get the year wrong. Finally, the mandatory corporate tax rate for US corporations is 35%, so Apple is still paying less than they should be. I did a full analysis here: http://patrickbay.ca/blog/?p=2868
You two went downhill together quickly. BTW, I support doston's position. Cheers.
At first I assume this was about people having to pay for OSX when they buy a powerbook that they are just going to run Win7 on.
that I saw defending Vodafones tax avoiding on The Register?
is still Enron Accounting, even when the cool kids do it.
What would that $500 iPad have cost the consumer if not for 24% of company profits going to various governments?
Don't forget, that's profits down the supply chain too. Foxconn gave a chunk of its profits to the government, so did every component supplier. This also doesn't include dozens of other taxes that are paid before a customer can walk out of the store with an iPad.
So, we're talking about estimated payments versus actual EoFY payments. They're off by what? One percent? Maybe two?
Well, that makes it all better, then.
Also, to be fair, since we're pointing out that these are estimated payments, let's be clear that they could be /over/-estimates. If you insist on printing a margin of error, then you have to be comfortable with that margin working against you, as well.