Going Offshore in the 2016 Election Campaign: The Donald
http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/05/05/going-offshore-2016-election-campaign
Ironically, Mossack Fonsecas Panama City headquarters is located a mere seven-minute drive from the Trump International Hotel and Towers in Panama City. (If youre interested, its website is pitching a bargain on rooms at 15% off our currently available Best Unrestricted Rate.) That decadent complex is one of many sketchy enterprises to which Trump lent his name for licensing purposes. According to his (unaudited) personal financial disclosure report filed with the Federal Election Commission, the deal earned him $5 million. In true Trumpian style, lawsuits and battles surround the endeavor.
Under the tax plan hes touting in his presidential campaign, U.S. businesses would see a reduction in their maximum tax rate from 35% to 15%. This lower rate (one of the best in the world) would, he claims, render corporate inversions unnecessary. The Donald apparently hopes that corporate America will be so eternally grateful to him that theyll move their money back onshore and pay taxes on it voluntarily (though most of them already dont pay the top tax rate here anyway).
Trumps views on a repatriation tax holiday that would let companies bring home their overseas stashes on a one-time basis for little or nothing have shifted over the course of his candidacy. Last year, he proposed the repatriation of hidden funds without penalty or taxation of any kind. Now hes advocating a more populist one-time 10% tax on them.
Although a key promise of his tax reform plan is to end the practice of stockpiling money in offshore accounts by American companies, he has personally invested in many of the companies that do so. As CBS News noted, in October 2015, Trump owned stock in 22 of the top 30 Fortune 500 companies ranked by their number of offshore subsidiaries. Its a group that has engineered 1,225 tax-haven subsidiaries holding $1.4 trillion. Of course, Trump has a keen understanding of the practices that disguise or shelter money from taxes. As he explained to supporters in Iowa this January, when it comes to his own business enterprises, "I pay as little as possible. I use every single thing in the book."