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Corporate Profits at All-Time High Wages at All-Time Low Can We Call it Class War Yet

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And almost half is most?

and when looking deeper at the problem of why US large firms are growing so fast in foreign markets it's because capital is flowing out of the US into those country's where US manufacturing and other jobs are being relocated to along with investment capital. US workers are tapped out, many can no longer afford those goods and services because of low and stagnant wages. it's a viscous cycle that once started amounts to nothing good occurring for the US economy in the future.

people have spent way too much time complaining about the slow recession recovery instead of focusing on the causes of it as they are all related.
 
Corporate Profits at All-Time High Wages at All-Time Low Can We Call it Class W

lol
not at all. if you bothered to read my post. i clearly stated i'm a mental midget when it comes to politics and economic issues. i bet you're the kind of chick who judges people you don't even know?

I wonder why Orbit nutrition would have an ass hole rep like you. Makes me not want to even bother considering those products when looking for my nutritional needs.

I could give a shit about your opinion of me or Orbit... Shop elsewhere if you like, it's your choice.
 
Corporate Profits at All-Time High Wages at All-Time Low Can We Call it Class W

I could give a shit about your opinion of me or Orbit... Shop elsewhere if you like, it's your choice.

I most definitely will now. you just put a nail in that coffin. orbit must be proud of you for turning off their customers or shall I say former customers.
 
Dodgeball: 5 ways companies beat the tax man - CBS News

Dodgeball: 5 ways companies beat the tax man

Around the world with tax loopholes

You pay your taxes, why don't big businesses? From Silicon Valley to the oil patch, powerful companies with the most creative accountants that money can buy have dreamed up some nifty ways to minimize, and often obliterate, their tax obligations. And a lot of the loopholes involve moving money around the globe. It's a big deal, recently noted Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, which has been conducting an ongoing investigation into corporate tax avoidance.

"At a time when we face such difficult budget choices, and when American families are facing a tax increase and cuts in critical programs from education to health care to food inspections to national defense, these offshore schemes are unacceptable."

Here's a look at some of the common ploys companies use to pay little or no tax.

Like other companies, Apple (AAPL) uses a complicated network of subsidiaries that, because of different tax rates around the world, allow it to avoid taxes both at home and abroad.

Here's roughly how it works: Apple locates as much of its profits as possible in overseas subsidiaries -- in one example, Apple Operations International, or AOI, is located in Ireland and controls various other Apple offshore subsidiaries. Apple's intellectual property, and hence its profit, is owned by AOI. Trouble is, only companies that are managed in Ireland pay taxes there, so Apple's off the hook there. At the same time, the unit isn't incorporated in the U.S., so it pays no taxes at home, either, in spite of that fact that the vast majority of its R&D is conducted at home. "Magically," said Levin, "It's neither here nor there."

"Apple argues that it is one of the biggest corporate taxpayers in America, that in 2012 alone, it paid $6 billion in taxes," he said. "What Apple doesn't say is that, also in 2012 alone, it shifted $36 billion in worldwide sales income away from the United States and paid no U.S. tax on any of it."

Facebook (FB) paid no tax in 2012. U.S. tax law allows the social networking company to deduct hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of stock options that it has issued to billionaire CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other top company executives. In its accounting, Facebook records the value of these options at only a few cents per share. Facebook executives concede that the loophole also will allow them to avoid tax bills in the future.

None of this is illegal, and Facebook isn't alone in using such maneuvers. Levin said this tax break costs the government between $12 billion and $61 billion a year. According to the advocacy group Citizens for Tax Justice, other major beneficiaries of the options technique are Apple, JPMorgan Chase (JPM), software maker EMC (EMC), Goldman Sachs (GS), Amazon (AMZN) and Exxon Mobil (XOM).

Large corporations commonly keep much or even most of their profits overseas -- indefinitely -- rather than bringing them home within arm's reach of the tax man. Hewlett Packard (HPQ) shifts profits made in the U.S. to offshore subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands and Belgium. Then, through a complicated schedule of short-term "loans," the company uses that money to pay for its daily operations back home. Even internal memos at the tech giant referred to the system as "repatriation strategy," leading Levin to call these practices "tax gimmickry."

"This scheme mocks the notion that profits of U.S. multinationals are 'locked up' or 'trapped' offshore," Levin said.

Microsoft (MSFT) still has a lock on many people's operating systems, but it's also skilled at manipulating the tax code, utilizing low-tax havens such as Singapore and Puerto Rico to minimize its tax responsibilities at home. For instance, the software giant sells the rights to its intellectual property to the company' Puerto Rico subsidiary. Microsoft U.S. then buys back from Microsoft Puerto Rico the distribution rights for the U.S. As a result, Microsoft U.S. gives Microsoft Puerto Rico 47 percent of its sales in the U.S.

As Levin points out, that's how Microsoft avoids U.S. taxes on 47 cents of each dollar of sales revenue at home. "The product is developed here," he said. "It is sold here, to customers here. And yet Microsoft pays no taxes here on nearly half the income. Microsoft saved over $4.5 billion in taxes on goods sold in the United States during the three years surveyed by the Subcommittee."
 
Income

Top 1% take biggest income slice on record

The gulf between the richest 1% of the USA and the rest of the country got to its widest level in history last year.

The top 1% of earners in the U.S. pulled in 19.3% of total household income in 2012, which is their biggest slice of total income in more than 100 years, according to a an analysis by economists at the University of California, Berkeley and the Paris School of Economics at Oxford University.

The richest Americans haven't claimed this large of a slice of total wealth since 1927, when the group claimed 18.7%. The analysis is based on data from Internal Revenue Service data.

One of the economists behind the research, Emmanuel Saez of the University of California, Berkeley, is a top researcher in the topic of wealth and income inequality. He won the John Bates Clark medal last year. The Clark medal is awarded to the most promising economists under the age of 40. Past winners have includes Paul Krugman of Princeton University, Lawrence Summers and Steve Levitt, co-author of "Freakonomics."

In a separate analysis, Saez found the top 1% of earnings posted 86% real income growth between 1993 and 2000. Meanwhile, the real income growth of the bottom 99% of earnings rose 6.6%.
 
another thing that goes along with the low wage mentality is that by spending less money on human capital, i.e. education, etc. it only causes the wealth gap between the middle/bottom and the top to increase even more making the long term economic outlook that much worst (along with increasing the changes of more bubble/burst cycles), but the folks that have been pushing austerity measures during an economic downturn couldn't be more clueless or they are in the pockets of those that own the means of production.
 
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