logo Standing Up To Powerful Interests

Close Corporate Tax Loopholes

 

What's New

On Monday, Nov. 19 the Maryland General Assembly finished its special session leaving corporate tax loopholes unaddressed. More than 48 Maryland businesses had joined Maryland PIRG in calling for a level playing field.

Click here to read the statement of Maryland's PIRG's Johanna Neumann. 

How You Can Help

Ask the State Senate to close corporate tax loopholes

No one should be able to game the system. But some multi-state corporations create tax loopholes using fancy accounting tricks to avoid paying taxes in Maryland. Please send an e-mail to your state Senators and ask them to level the playing field for in-state businesses by closing corporate tax loopholes.

Overview

Level The Playing Field

Loopholes in Maryland’s tax code allow mostly out-of-state businesses to avoid their fair share of taxes. As a result of this loophole, in-state businesses are playing on an uneven field, competing against multi-state companies that use high-priced, sophisticated accountants and complex transactions with subsidiaries to avoid paying their fair share. While currently legal, some multi-state businesses can shift their Maryland profits to out-of-state subsidiaries to avoid paying taxes here; while businesses located only in Maryland cannot take advantage of these loopholes or other tax shell games.

Businesses should thrive based on their efficiency and innovation, not their opportunities for ‘creative’ tax accounting and tax avoidance.

With a $1.5 billion budget deficit, making corporations pay their fair share of taxes not only makes good fiscal sense, it’s also the right thing to do. Over 60 percent of corporations that do business in Maryland don’t pay a penny in Maryland taxes. This leaves taxpayers—both businesses and individuals—to foot the bill for vital services including transportation, education, and public safety.

This tax loophole should be closed. Combined reporting requires companies with subsidiaries and affiliates to file taxes in a single combined report and then apportions taxes according to the combined group’s in-state business activity.




Maryland PIRG's policy advocate Johanna Neumann talks with reporters about the need to close corporate tax loopholes at a news conference outside Maryland's Statehouse.  

Results

Checking Corporate Abuse

In the wake of Enron and other scandals, Maryland PIRG and other state PIRGs helped pass the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002, a solid first step in cleaning up corporate fraud and other abuses in Maryland and across the nation. Maryland PIRG continues to support tougher standards for the Corporate Reform Act.