logo Standing Up To Powerful Interests

Tax & Budget News

SearchRSS Feed

For Immediate Release:
2008-07-02
For More Information:
Deirdre Cummings
Legislative Director
(617) 292-4800


States Closing Tax Loophole Comprise 55% of Economy

Massachusetts becomes 23rd state to modernize with combinded reporting

With Governor Deval Patrick signing the Tax Fairness Bill to close corporate tax loopholes today,  a majority of the U.S. economy has now adopted a tax reform that was still considered controversial only a few years ago. “Combined reporting,” as the tax modernization is called, levels the playing field between businesses by preventing companies from using out-of-state subsidiaries to avoid paying their taxes.

Five years ago less than 30% of the U.S. economy, represented by 16 states used combined reporting. Now including Massachusetts, over 55% of the economy will take place in states using combined reporting.

“In the face of tremendous opposition voiced by big businesses lobbying, the Governor, and the legislature demonstrated true leadership and supported common sense reforms reducing opportunities for tax avoidance and restoring fairness to our tax system,” said Deirdre Cummings, Legislative Director with MASSPIRG.

“This is part of a larger tipping point,” said Phineas Baxandall, Ph.D. of U.S.PIRG, the Federation of State Public Interest Research Groups, which advocates for this reform.  “Combined reporting has become standard best practice. Aside from a few tax lawyers who will lose business on creating complex tax dodges, this is a day that everyone should celebrate.”

Combined reporting was first introduced in California in 1937 as a way to adjust to the fact that modern companies often operate across state lines. The practice requires companies to file taxes in a single combined return, rather than carving up activities into separate – often out of state – subsidiaries that can avoid state taxes. Combined reporting eliminates any incentive to use accounting schemes or fictional transactions between subsidiaries as a way to hide reportable income. Combined reporting only taxes companies based on their in-state business activity.

For decades combined reporting was stymied by lawsuits, and then by lobbying from corporations that  benefit from tax loopholes. The landscape has shifted as regulators and the public become more aware of tax-avoidance schemes that favor out-of-state companies.

Texas, Ohio, and Michigan don’t levy corporate income taxes but use combined reporting to assess taxes on their broad-based business taxes that the states introduced in 2005, 2006 and 2007 respectively.

SEARCH THIS SITE