| Citizens for Tax Justice , 202-626-3780 | October 29, 2001 |
Click here to see this analysis in PDF format. Last year, IBM reported $5.7 billion in pretax U.S. profits. Despite a
supposed 35 percent corporate tax rate, IBM’s actual federal income tax
bill was only 3.4 percent of its pretax U.S. earnings. Without the AMT, IBM
would have paid a mere 0.2 percent.* In 2000, Ford Motor Co. reported $9.4 billion in pretax U.S. profits, but it
paid only 6.3 percent of that in federal income taxes.* The previous year,
Ford paid only 5 percent on $9.3 billion in pretax U.S. profits. Ford’s annual
report doesn’t offer full disclosure, but it appears that without the AMT,
Ford would have paid virtually nothing in taxes over the past two years. General Motors reported $2.9 billion in pretax U.S. profits in 2000. Despite
the AMT, GM paid no federal income tax at all. Instead, GM got a outright
tax rebate of $105 million.* In fact, over the past six years, GM has paid
nothing in federal income taxes, despite $22.4 billion in pretax U.S. profits! In 1998 and 1999, General Electric reported a total of $21.3 billion in
pretax U.S. profits. It paid a mere 8.8 percent of that in federal income
taxes. Without the AMT, GE’s tax rate would have been only 4.6 percent. United Airlines earned $1.2 billion in pretax U.S. profits in 1998, but paid
only 8.6 percent of that in federal income taxes. Without the AMT, United
would have paid only 3.8 percent. Comdisco reported $181 million in pretax U.S. profits in 1998, and paid
just 6.1 percent of that in federal income taxes. Without the AMT,
Comdisco’s tax bill would have been negative—it would have gotten an
outright tax rebate from the U.S. Treasury.
*Updated to reflect tax benefits from stock options.
Related CTJ Analyses Analysis of Senate Stimulus Plan 10/29/01 Analysis of House Stimulus Plan 10/15/01 Impact of Accelerated Rate Cuts 10/15/01 $7.4 Billion in AMT Relief for 16 Corporations 10/26/01 Corporate Income Taxes in the 1990s 10/19/00
Compiled from corporate annual reports by Citizens for Tax Justice, Oct. 2001(updated Nov 2001).