• @jordanlund
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    9 months ago

    There’s a bunch of stuff in those books that I certainly never knew… for example:

    "The IRS devised a formula for valuing personal use of corporate jets.

    At the end of 2002, the rates for personal use of corporate planes were as low as $0.09/mile for small planes, and no more than $0.83/mile for the biggest jets.

    For a personal trip from NY to LA in a luxury corporate jet, the official rates valued the trip at $1,347/person. (Less than the first-class fare of $2,200.)

    The executive pays nothing.

    Companies count the value of this personal trip as if it were income for the executive, and the executive just pays the income tax on that amount.

    So, for an executive in a top tax bracket, the additional tax on that flight was $520.

    But if there’s a memo in the corporate files stating that commercial air travel is too dangerous and company-provided transportation is necessary, then it’s only $260 in federal income taxes.

    The $260 that the government takes is offset by the value of the tax deduction that the corporation claims on the jet.

    The company gets a deduction that saves at least $3,500 in taxes.

    That means the minimum subsidy the taxpayers provide to the executive for taking the jet is $3,240, the value of what the company saves in taxes offset by the $260 from the executive.

    Diligent shareholders don’t know how much personal use of a corporate jet costs them, as those details aren’t noted in the documents that shareholders see."

    Another good one:

    "In 1998, Jerry Curnutt was the IRS partnership specialist. While examining a tax return that reported an investment of $10, he discovered a tax dodge.

    The partnership’s $1,000 in capital earned almost ½ billion in profits.

    The partner who had put up the $10 (Partner A) received 1% of the profits, while the other 99% went to the other partner (Partner B). Partner A was a business that had to pay taxes on its profits. Partner B was a tax-exempt entity.

    Here’s how it worked:

    The first trick was to report the profits, but assign them to Partner B, avoiding about $160 million of federal income taxes.

    The second trick was characterizing this profit as capital due to Partner A, so that no tax would be paid.

    Then, the capital was returned in the form of property that could be depreciated, and by writing off a portion of the ½ billion dollar asset each year, the Partner A could reduce its taxes on other profits it earned.

    Thus, for $10, Partner A avoided paying $330 million of taxes over a few years.

    Ultimately, Curnutt found a small number of partnerships that didn’t report the profit, resulting in billions in taxes that were never paid.

    The IRS declined to pursue these entities, because auditing partnerships carried a political risk, such as turning up the names of important campaign contributors."