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The Center for Freedom and Prosperity invites you to a Heritage Foundation seminar:
Understanding Corporate Expatriation: Is it Good Business or Unpatriotic Behavior When Companies Re-Domicile
in Low-Tax Jurisdictions?
Featuring
"Why Do Corporations Expatriate?" Tim Hanford, Federal Policy Group
"Territorial Taxation: Creating a Level Playing Field" Daniel Mitchell, McKenna Senior Fellow
at the Heritage Foundation
"Why Fiscal Competition Should be Preserved" Andrew F. Quinlan, Center for Freedom and Prosperity
Friday, May 10th 12:00-2:00 Capitol Hill Club** The Capitol Room, 4th Floor Lunch will be served
** Located at 300 First Street SE Washington DC 20003 (202) 484-4590
The U.S. taxes companies on their "worldwide" income, an approach that makes American-based companies less competitive. A U.S. firm competing against a Dutch firm for business in
Ireland, for instance, would have to pay a 35 percent tax on its income – with the lion's share going to the IRS. The Dutch firm, by contrast, only pays the 10 percent Irish tax on its Irish-source income because
Holland has a "territorial" tax system (the common-sense notion that a government only taxes income earned inside a nation's borders). In an effort to remain competitive and protect the interests of shareholders and
workers, some U.S. companies are re-chartering in low-tax jurisdictions. A company that expatriates to one of these jurisdictions no longer has to pay U.S. tax on its overseas income. This enables the company –
which still maintains substantial U.S. operations and pays taxes to the U.S. government on all income earned in America – to compete on a level playing field with foreign competitors. Some politicians want to stop
expatriations. Senators Max Baucus and Charles Grassley are pushing a proposal that would arbitrarily declare that certain companies are based in the United States regardless of where they are chartered. The panel
will discuss whether expatriation should be prohibited and review different ways of keeping companies chartered in the U.S.
Please RSVP to Crystal Gibson, (crystal.gibson@heritage.org
), either by e-mail or by calling 202.608.6078.
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