Professor Bogdanski's post today about the corporate gross revenues tax that's the subject of Initiative Petition 17, which we may see on our November ballot, prodded me to pursue some math that I'd been working on for a week or two. The basic premise of the corporate gross revenues tax is that corporations that sold more than $25 million/year in Oregon would pay the state a tax of 3% of their gross revenues above $25 million. The state would distribute that fund equally to all Oregonians who satisfied a modest residency requirement. The state believes that prices will increase 1.3% if the measure passes. Willamette Week quotes the chief petitioner's reply: "Giant corporations can deduct the tax increase in IP 17from what they pay to the federal government. So they are not going to pay that much more, if anything at all. And No. 2, these corporations price their goods nationally or regionally, right? An iPhone costs the same in Portland as it does in Texas. There's no difference. So we don't think price increases will happen."
Let's unpack that with an unpopular example. WalMart, the store that all good Oregonians love to hate when they're not inside shopping, will be our case study. WalMart's sales are about $650 billion/year. Its consolidated pretax income was $21.8 billion, income taxes were $5.6 billion, and after-tax net income after a deduction for minority interests was $15.5 billion, which is about 2.4% of its annual sales. About 0.8% of WalMart's United States stores are in Oregon. Some of WalMart's operations are overseas. It's a fair guess that WalMart sells about $4.5 billion/year in Oregon (maybe $90 million per store) and nets about $120 million/year from its Oregon operations.
IP 17 would levy a tax of $135 million/year on WalMart for its Oregon sales, which corresponds to an effective state income tax rate of 113%. WalMart cannot offset the state income tax against its federal tax obligation - the chief petitioner may have skipped the corporate taxation class -- but it can claim the state income tax as a deduction against its federal income. WalMart allows about 26% of its income for income taxes, so a state tax of $135 million creates a federal tax savings of about $32.5 million, for a net tax increase of $102.5 million on profits of $120 million, an effective tax rate of about 85%. That's in addition to the actual state income tax, and will push WalMart's effective tax rate in Oregon to the mid-90s. Put another way, Oregon will collect 15 to 20 times as much profit from WalMart as WalMart will.
To bring a mot of Oscar Wilde up to date, "If this is the way Oregon taxes its enterprises, it doesn't deserve to have any."
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