Read

Error message

Notice: Undefined index: base_url in include_once() (line 125 of /home3/occupyco/public_html/dev/sites/default/settings.php).

User menu

Search form

"Look away, America!": The Corporate Bait and Switch

"Look away, America!": The Corporate Bait and Switch
Fri, 4/12/2013 - by Leo Gerard
This article originally appeared on Campaign for America's Future

As the U.S. Commerce Department released a report late last month showing corporate profits at a 60-year high, suddenly the big newswas about how cheating surely must be rampant in social security disability.

Wait, what?

Also late last month, a Washington Post investigation showed that the 30 companies that make up the Dow Jones industrial average pay a dramatically smaller portion of their profits in taxes than they did a half century ago. Instead of discussing how that impacts government services, all of Washington is talking about slashing Social Security and Medicare.

It’s bait and switch.

CEOs and 1 percenters have elevated that old con to a whole new level. To them, bait is not a lure to a store but a taunt about the poor. “Look over there, a welfare queen!” they goad. “Look, someone not-quite-dirt-poor might get Medicaid,” they needle. Then they laugh all the way to their secret accounts in the Caymans as the 99 percent fight among themselves over how many pennies the government throws at the poor.

The rich snicker as the vast majority of Americans are so distracted they don’t focus on record corporate profits, on record low corporate tax payments or on lobbyists buying tax breaks for corporations and loopholes for offshore accounts.

In defense of the 99 percent, it’s hard to concentrate on the big economic picture when household finances are so grim. The Commerce Department reported that in January personal income fell 3.6 percent. Overall, considering taxes and inflation, the decline was the largest in 57 years.

This bad news follows what the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) calls a lost decade for most American families. In its 12th edition of The State of Working America, EPI writes:

A quarter century of wage stagnation and slow income growth preceded this lost decade, largely because rising wage, income and wealth inequality funneled the rewards of economic growth to the top.”

The top made out like, well, like bandits. Over the past 30 years, CEO compensation rose from 42 times the average blue collar worker’s pay to 380 times.

But CEOs say, “Look away, America. Look away!” Focus instead, CEOs say, on minimum wage! Why should some guy earning the minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, a whopping total of $15,080 a year, get a raise, as President Obama proposes, when the average worker has not? That needling comes from CEOs pulling down 380 times a blue-collar worker’s pay.

Never mind that both blue-collar and minimum wage workers should get raises. Especially since the Commerce Department sayscorporate profits increased to 25.6 percent in 2012, the highest in any year since 1950 and far higher than the 19.9 percent level common in the years just before the economic collapse.

Corporations have the money for raises. They’re just not giving it to the people whose labor produced the profits.

And they’re sure as hell not giving it to the government either. Citizens for Tax Justice and the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policyevaluated 280 of the Fortune 500 companies and found that 30 paid no federal income taxes at all from 2008 through 2010. The following year, 26 paid no income taxes. None. Zip. Zero.

Some corporations pay. But not much. A Washington Post analysis found that about 50 years ago, corporations included in the current Dow Jones industrial average routinely listed federal tax expenses as 25 to 50 percent of worldwide profits. Now, the Post found, they report less than half that.

These are companies whose lobbyists whine and cry to Congress that the nation’s 35 percent top corporate tax rate is just too terribly high. Among those singing that sad song is Procter & Gamble, which the Washington Post found pays 15 percent. P&G, the world’s largest manufacturer of consumer products, insisted in a statement last year that the United States must “reduce the corporate tax rate.”

Right, so then Procter & Gamble would pay a smaller percentage than a blue collar worker.

“Look away, workers, look away,” the CEOs say. “Look over there, where someone on food stamps is buying cigarettes! If they can buy a pack of cigarettes, then they don’t deserve food stamps, right? Attack food stamp recipients!” the CEOs urge, inciting the 99 percent to fight among themselves.

Last week, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists began releasing information regarding offshore bank accounts and shell companies belonging to the world’s 1 percenters. The information came from a cache of 2.5 million files leaked to the Washington, D.C.-based group. The files include the names of 4,000 Americans who stashed money in tax havens like the Caymans, where secrecy aids and abets tax evasion and money laundering.

Don’t take the bait as these formerly-secret account holders try to distract you. Ignore them as they try to shift attention to some hapless pregnant teenager on welfare. Instead, focus the mind on this: The politicians who allow off-shore tax evasion, the politicians who establish loopholes so corporations pay no income taxes at all, the politicians who refuse to enforce the provision of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law requiring corporations to report the difference between CEO compensation and average workers’ pay. Time to vote and switch those politicians out of office.

Originally published by Campaign for America's Future.

 

3 WAYS TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT

ONE-TIME DONATION

Just use the simple form below to make a single direct donation.

DONATE NOW

MONTHLY DONATION

Be a sustaining sponsor. Give a reacurring monthly donation at any level.

GET SOME MERCH!

Now you can wear your support too! From T-Shirts to tote bags.

SHOP TODAY

Sign Up

Article Tabs

prison reform, incarceration rates, private prisons, for-profit prisons, white supremacy, enslavement, climate justice, racial justice, Green New Deal

The year 2020 has caused many white people to realize we live in a racist system. The Green New Deal is about systemic change for all, and deconstructing racism must be front and central in this agenda.

coronavirus pandemic, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Jair Bolsonaro, COVID-19 deaths, downplaying coronavirus

By infecting three of the world’s most right-wing leaders, the coronavirus underscored not only the incompetence and irresponsibility of their governments – but the truth that their brand of populism doesn't keep people safe.

COVID-19, corporate bailouts, corporate welfare, corporate destruction

Corporations are not "too big to fail" and, when they commit crimes, they are not "too big to jail." As David Whyte writes in his new book, "Ecocide: Kill the Corporation Before It Kills Us," the moment is now to rein in out-of-control corporate power.

The world has lost an incredible thinker and doer. I have lost an amazing friend. A void exists where before it was filled with David's optimism, humour and joy.

Kevin Zeese speaks at a rally for Chelsea Manning. By Ellen Davidson.

Kevin fought to bring truth every day. We must not lose this struggle.

prison reform, incarceration rates, private prisons, for-profit prisons, white supremacy, enslavement, climate justice, racial justice, Green New Deal

The year 2020 has caused many white people to realize we live in a racist system. The Green New Deal is about systemic change for all, and deconstructing racism must be front and central in this agenda.

coronavirus pandemic, Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Jair Bolsonaro, COVID-19 deaths, downplaying coronavirus

By infecting three of the world’s most right-wing leaders, the coronavirus underscored not only the incompetence and irresponsibility of their governments – but the truth that their brand of populism doesn't keep people safe.

COVID-19, corporate bailouts, corporate welfare, corporate destruction

Corporations are not "too big to fail" and, when they commit crimes, they are not "too big to jail." As David Whyte writes in his new book, "Ecocide: Kill the Corporation Before It Kills Us," the moment is now to rein in out-of-control corporate power.

The world has lost an incredible thinker and doer. I have lost an amazing friend. A void exists where before it was filled with David's optimism, humour and joy.

Kevin Zeese speaks at a rally for Chelsea Manning. By Ellen Davidson.

Kevin fought to bring truth every day. We must not lose this struggle.