M E M O R A N D U M
To: Reporters and Editors
Fr: Jill Gerber for Sen. Grassley, 202/224-6522
Re: Tax-avoiding federal contractors
Da: Wednesday, Jan. 20, 2010
On December 14, right after a story about federal employees not paying their taxes, Senator Chuck Grassley asked the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service about unpaid taxes by government contractors who receive hundreds of billions of dollars every year in payments from Medicare and Medicaid. Senator Grassley’s letter was based on reports from the Government Accountability Office in 2008 and earlier that these contractors owe more than $1 billion in unpaid taxes each year, including the payroll taxes used to fund Medicare and Medicaid. On December 15, Grassley said, “These reports raise a tax fairness issue. It’s not right for a few to shirk their obligations. It’s especially offensive that tax delinquencies come from federal employees and contractors. I’ve asked the IRS for an accounting of what the agency is doing to collect these taxes and to coordinate enforcement efforts with the federal agency that runs the Medicare and Medicaid programs.”
Grassley’s work to stop the awarding of federal contracts to companies that don’t pay their U.S. taxes dates to 2002, when he revealed that several companies that created phony foreign “headquarters” to escape U.S. taxes also enjoyed lucrative federal contracts. He introduced legislation to bar such companies from getting federal contracts.
Grassley made the following comment on today’s announcement by the President to crack down on tax evaders who get federal contracts:
“This crackdown is the right thing to do. It’s a matter of fairness, and it’s especially offensive that contractors who make money from tax dollars are delinquent in paying their own taxes. I’ve worked on this issue for a long time, including asking the President’s nominees about it, so it’s good to see the President express interest. So far, the IRS says it’s still working on my latest inquiry of December 14 on unpaid taxes for government contractors. I’ve been told I’ll get some information if I get the committee chairman involved to get access to certain materials. So it remains to be seen whether today’s announcement will produce the results that the President intends. He has a lot of follow-up work ahead.
“I also hope the President will follow up on the problem of federal employees not paying their taxes. Everybody should pay what they owe, federal employees and contractors included.”
Grassley’s press releases from last December and 2002 follow here.
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Grassley seeks action against tax delinquent federal contractors
WASHINGTON --- Following Monday’s report that federal workers collectively owe more than $3 billion in income taxes from 2008, Senator Chuck Grassley is asking the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service about unpaid taxes by government contractors who receive hundreds of billions of dollars every year in payments from Medicare and Medicaid.
Reports from the Government Accountability Office last year and previously indicate that these contractors owe over $1 billion in unpaid taxes each year, including the payroll taxes used to fund Medicare and Medicaid.
Grassley said these reports raise a tax fairness issue. “It’s not right for a few to shirk their obligations, and it’s especially offensive that these tax delinquencies come from federal employees and contractors,” he said.
Grassley said he’s asked the IRS for an accounting of what the agency is doing to collect these taxes and to coordinate enforcement efforts with the federal agency that runs the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
Grassley is the Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Finance, which is responsible for tax policy and legislation and oversight of the Medicare and Medicaid programs. The text of his letter to the IRS Commissioner is here.
December 14, 2009
The Honorable Douglas H. Shulman
Commissioner
Internal Revenue Service
United States Department of the Treasury
1111 Constitution Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20224
Dear Commissioner Shulman:
Each year, the federal government makes hundreds of billions of dollars of payments to health care providers for both the Medicare and Medicaid programs. While most health care providers under these programs pay their fair share of taxes, the United States Government Accountability Office (GAO) has reported repeatedly that thousands of health care providers had significant amounts of unpaid federal taxes. Specifically:
• In March 2007, GAO testified that over 21,000 physicians, health professionals, and suppliers paid under Medicare Part B during the first 9 months of calendar year 2005 had tax debts totaling over $1 billion. (GAO-07-587T)
• In November 2007, GAO reported that over 30,000 Medicaid providers paid during fiscal year 2006 had over $1 billion of unpaid federal taxes. (GAO-08-17)
• In June 2008, GAO reported that over 27,000 Medicare providers paid during calendar year 2006 owed over $2 billion in federal taxes. (GAO-08-618)
Much of the unpaid taxes owed by these health care providers consisted of payroll taxes, which are used to fund the Medicare program.
In these reports and testimonies, GAO also discussed the results of its in-depth audits and related investigations of 90 health care providers with high tax debts. GAO reported, among other things that many of these providers were established businesses (such as corporations) that owed payroll taxes withheld for their employees. Rather than fulfill their role as “trustees” of this money and forward these funds to the IRS as required; these health care providers diverted the money for other purposes.
The GAO went on to state that: “Many of these individuals accumulated substantial wealth and assets, including million-dollar houses and luxury vehicles, while failing to pay their fair share of federal taxes.” Further, some of these health care providers received Medicare and/or Medicaid payments even though they had serious quality-of-care issues, including license reprimands and prior suspensions from state medical boards, revocations of hospital privileges, and previous exclusions from the Medicare program. Interestingly, for all 90 cases, GAO stated that they referred them to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for further collection activity and criminal investigation, as warranted.
Because of the seriousness of the abuses of the 90 health care providers identified by GAO, I would like a detailed description of all collection activities and other actions taken by the IRS subsequent to the GAO referral. The enclosure provides the information that I am requesting for each of the 90 cases.
Sincerely,
Chuck Grassley
United States Senator
Ranking Member of the Committee on Finance
Enclosure
For Immediate Release
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 2002
Grassley Bill Stops Government Contracts for Expatriated Companies
WASHINGTON -- Sen. Chuck Grassley, ranking member of the Committee on Finance, today introduced legislation to bar the award of federal contracts to companies that create phony foreign “headquarters” to escape U.S. taxes.
“These corporations flee the United States to save millions in taxes, and then come back into the United States to get fat contracts with the federal government,” Grassley said. “Imagine the nerve. They create phony foreign headquarters in a file folder or a mail box to escape taxes and then use other peoples’ taxes to turn a profit. That’s really something -- something we need to stop.”
Grassley introduced the Reclaiming Expatriated Contracts and Profits (RECAP) Act with Sen. Max Baucus, chairman of the Committee on Finance, as the original co-sponsor. The bill complements their earlier legislation, the Reversing the Expatriation of Profits Offshore (REPO) Act, to shut down corporate inversions. That bill passed the committee in June and is awaiting full Senate consideration as part of a pending bill to increase charitable giving.
Grassley was the first senator to disclose that inverting corporations receive federal contracts, in March of this year. The RECAP Act bars future corporate inverters from ever receiving federal contracts. For those companies that already have inverted, the RECAP Act makes them send back their ill-gotten tax savings by forcing them to lower their bids to obtain government contracts. These inverters will have to lower their bid by 10 percent to be competitive, which will level the playing field for federal contractors that loyally stay and pay in the United States. The RECAP bill does not unwind federal contracts that were legal when entered into, and therefore, unlike other proposals, will not cause thousands of Americans to lose their jobs.
Grassley said he waited to introduce his legislation because of the committee system. He said he wanted the committees with jurisdiction over government contracts to act on this issue, but they have not. Instead, Grassley said, a series of politically motivated amendments have been offered in Congress that would be ineffective, easily evaded, and, if enacted, could cost thousands of Americans their jobs.
“I read in the paper last week that the defense appropriations conferees dropped one of those amendments rather than try to rewrite it,” Grassley said. “I decided enough is enough. It’s time for serious legislation on this issue.”
According to an Oct. 1, 2002, analysis by the General Accounting Office, Tyco had more than 1,700 contracts in 2001, worth over $286 million. Accenture had contracts worth nearly $279 million. Ingersoll Rand left the United States for Bermuda, where it reportedly pays less than $28,000 a year to register its phony headquarters and receives $40 million in U.S. tax savings. Ingersoll Rand had government contracts in 2001 worth $36 million.
Grassley said he will work on this legislation in the next Congress if time runs out for consideration this year.
For Immediate Release
Thursday, March 21, 2002
Grassley Seeks End to Government Contracts for Corporate Tax Evaders
WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley, ranking member of the Committee on Finance, today revealed that several corporations that have set up shop overseas to avoid U.S. taxes enjoy lucrative contracts with the federal government. Grassley pledged to work to end this practice.
“I have no problem with U.S. companies operating in low-tax countries for legitimate business purposes,” Grassley said. “Companies have to compete in the international markets. My problem is with companies that set up fictional headquarters in low-tax countries to escape U.S. taxes. These fictional headquarters are no more than a folder in a filing cabinet. Some of these companies add insult to injury by signing big contracts with the federal government. These corporations are skirting their own taxes, yet profiting from other people’s taxes. That’s wrong.”
Grassley said the practice of setting up in low-tax jurisdictions to avoid taxes has gone on for years. For example, for years U.S. insurance companies have been fleeing to Bermuda to eliminate U.S. tax on their investments and gain a financial advantage over U.S.-based insurers.
However, the recent spate of relocations are bigger and different, Grassley said. The recent deals could not have been done without the two-year-old recession and the depressed stock market. Net operating losses have built up during the recession. Those losses are used to shield the corporation from tax when it does a purely paper move to the tax haven country. For these deals to work, the stock market must be depressed. A depressed stock market reduces the tax on the shareholders who approve these deals, and the stock market has been depressed since the tragic events of September 11, Grassley said.
Grassley said after September 11, Ingersoll Rand left the country for Bermuda. According to media reports, it pays less than $28,000 a year to Bermuda and receives $40 million in U.S. tax savings. Stanley Works, the American tool maker, has announced it is leaving the United States to go to Bermuda. Stanley has expressed pride in shaving 7 percent off of its effective tax rates.
“It’s outrageous that some companies are willing to leave their country during a war and a recession just to save some taxes,” Grassley said. “It’s especially shocking when those companies are enjoying big government contracts.”
Grassley said Stanley Works had 100 government contracts during 2001, and Ingersoll Rand had more than 200 government contracts in 2001.
Grassley said he plans to crack down on this abuse. “Let me be clear to everyone developing or contemplating one of these deals, you proceed at your own peril,” Grassley said. “I’m working on bipartisan legislation to go after not only the corporate expatriation abuse, but also the abusers who seek big government contracts while skirting their U.S. tax obligations.”
Grassley obtained the following statistics from the General Services Administration regarding some federal contractors who have completed a corporate expatriation transaction, also known as an inversion. GSA is continuing to review other contractors who have completed inversions.
Ingersoll Rand completed its inversion in December. Stanley Works has not yet inverted, but is in the process of doing so. The following are the annual statistics for these two federal contractors:
(dollars are in thousands)
Stanley Works
FY 2001 100 actions $5,661
FY 2000 59 $3,893
FY 1999 25 $2,143
FY 1998 38 $2,582
FY 1997 no number provided $12,828
Ingersoll-Rand
FY 2001 203 actions $12,386
FY 2000 152 $24,442
FY 1999 133 $8,463
FY 1998 86 $6,322
FY 1997 no number provided $10,225