On paper, Donald Trump and congressional Republicans slashed the U.S. corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, delivering a windfall for private-sector giants that were already enjoying record profits. But in practice, the official tax rates only tell part of the story.
A couple of years ago, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy released the results of a detailed study that found of the Fortune 500 companies, about 400 paid an average tax rate of about 11% — roughly half of the current rate of 21% — thanks to a series of loopholes, exemptions, and giveaways Republicans made no effort to address in the “tax reform” package.
What’s more, as regular readers may recall, the same research found that plenty of corporate giants weren’t paying any federal taxes at all.
To understate matters, the tax landscape hasn’t improved. The Washington Post reported this morning:
Fifty-five of the nation’s largest corporations paid no federal income tax on more than $40 billion in profits last year, according to an analysis by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, a progressive think tank. In fact, they received a combined federal rebate of more than $3 billion, for an effective tax rate of approximately negative 9 percent.
The same report added that, in the wake of the Republican tax-cut package from four years ago, 26 corporations haven’t paid any federal income taxes in recent years — including private-sector giants such as FedEx and Nike — even as these same corporations enjoyed a combined income of $77 billion.
All of this is certainly notable in its own terms. Indeed, when polls show many Americans endorsing higher taxes on big businesses, it’s likely because much of the public realizes that the playing field is tilted unfairly in corporations’ favor.








