Big Fat Finance Blog

Archive for February, 2009

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Another Blow to Irish Pride

The Celtic Tiger’s roar is sadly muted these days, what with Dell’s decision to close its Limerick factory and head for lower-cost pastures in Poland, and dark murmurs in the press about the possibility of a new Irish exodus. And now, as if the economic news isn’t bad enough, the country has to endure a bout of whining from rock icon Bono, who says he feels “stung” and “hurt” by criticisms leveled at his band for moving its music publishing operation to the Netherlands to reduce its tax burden. more

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Who Protected the Ratings Oligopoly?

It may surprise most people to learn that it was only two years ago that a century of self-regulation in the ratings industry came to an end. Despite efforts by Moody’s, S&P, and Fitch to derail the legislative effort, Congress passed the 2006 Credit Rating Agency Reform Act, granting the SEC supervision over the large rating firms for the first time. To boost competition in the ratings industry, the act invited new entrants to come in and compete with the larger agencies for a designation known as Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization (NRSRO).


Two years and one financial crisis later, competition inside the ratings industry is still largely absent. more

U.S. Corporate Taxes “the Highest in the World”?

In his address to Congress on Tuesday, President Obama devoted exactly one sentence to corporate tax policy. But it was a significant one: “We will restore a sense of fairness and balance to our tax code by finally ending the tax breaks for corporations that ship our jobs overseas.”


Clearly the President intends to target the rules that allow U.S.-based corporations to defer income taxes on revenue earned by their overseas subsidiaries until that money is brought back to the United States. His efforts will be buttressed by a recent GAO report showing massive use of overseas low-tax jurisdictions by large U.S. companies, as well as outraged calls from fellow Democrats to crack down on overseas tax havens, as I reported in my last post.


It’s hard to see what can stop this particular Obama steamroller. So far, few voices have pointed out the obvious reason why these corporations keep billions of dollars stashed overseas: the double taxation of foreign operations’ income, by the United States — at a notoriously high statutory rate — and by the foreign jurisdiction.


Senator Charles Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, came close in an NPR interview in which he noted that “the United States has a corporate tax system that’s a lot different than other countries’. From that standpoint, what we have to do — with the highest marginal tax rate of any corporate tax in the world — we have to make sure that we have the incentives to keep business within our country and to keep our businesses competitive with others’ …”


Really? The highest in the world? more

Are Target Funds the 401(k) Panacea?

Public policy debates about the nation’s retirement system will rage this year as legislators consider the impact of the drop in value of equity investments in workers’ 401(k) balances. more

IFRS for Private Companies

Most of the attention regarding International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) has focused on the possible implementation schedule for public companies. Sometimes overlooked is the potential use of IFRS within private companies.


However, work is proceeding on that front, as well. The International Accounting Standards Board, also known as the IASB, is the group charged with developing quality, understandable, and international financial reporting standards. The IASB has been working on a set of standards that it’s calling IFRS for Non-publicly Accountable Entities (here’s yet another acronym — NPAEs). About 120 small companies from 20 countries participated in a field test of the standards, restating their financial statements to comply with the draft IFRS for NPAEs. The IASB assessed the results last year, and plans to draft a final standard of IFRS for NPAEs later this year. more

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