On 5/23/2013 5:09 PM, Justin wrote:
> I love when WoW playing Aspies try to pretend they understand corporate
> finance!
> Since I have it on good authority that disobeying the law is "immoral"
> obeying the law is therefore "moral." Since Apple is obeying the law,
> there are not doing anything wrong.
Here, I beg to differ. Disobeying the law is not necessarily always
*immoral*, only "illegal". Believe it or not, morality and legality
often do part ways...
While I generally don't question Apple's legality in its marketplace
maneuverings, I *do* question its 'morality' at times, however.
Having said that, the same can be said of any huge corporation such as
HP, Microsoft, in all fairness. But until we find a way to put
corporations in "jail", little will change. Until then, I really
don't want corporations dictating my morality to me, nor do I relish
the thought of corporations getting so big so as to monopolize markets
and being devoid of any sense of communal ethics/morality, either.
I see both sides of the corporate interests vs societal interests
conundrum. But then the biggest corporation of them all is what
concerns me most... specifically, the U.S. government. I refuse to
let it frame the discussion as to just what is 'fair' and just what
constitutes 'moral' or 'immoral' with regard to tax-avoidance. The
concept of minimizing one's tax obligation is entirely legal AND moral
and should not be cast as "tax avoidance". The very term of "tax
avoidance" carries a connotation that is simply undeserved in most
cases. Are there illegal tax avoidance schemes? Most certainly - but
the overall tone set by the current U.S. administration stinks of dead
rotting badgers. Obunghole's attack of Romney's Cayman Island
account(s) is particularly disingenuous and unfairly dismisses the
concept of >asset protection<, which is also entirely legal AND moral...
>
>
>
http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/23/opinion/marshall-apple-taxes/index.html?
> hpt=hp_t4
>
> "How flawed is it? Let us count the ways. First, it subjects U.S.-based
> corporations to a top marginal rate of 35%, among the highest in the
> world. Designed at a time when U.S. companies competed mainly with each
> other, the code now hobbles them in global competition."
>
> "Second, the code is riddled with special tax deductions, credits and
> exemptions, which make it both fiendishly complicated and economically
> inefficient.
Agreed, the tax code is in dire need of an overhaul. However, I have
to caution against broad brush painting of all tax deductions,
credits, and exemptions as well. This is little more than throwing
the baby out with the bathwater, which is equally dumb and (dare I say
it?) - *immoral*. The last thing I want to see is the government
empowered to play the 'class envy' card under a phony guise of
'equitability' and 'fair share' arguments. Success has to remain a
more fundamental societal incentive over the aforementioned nebulous
terms.
> As economist Robert Shapiro noted in a recent Progressive
> Policy Institute study, these provisions entail significant administrative
> and compliance costs and, more damagingly from the standpoint of economic
> growth, undercut markets' ability to allocate capital to its most
> productive uses. They also make the code highly inequitable as some
> companies get breaks while others don't with little rhyme or reason other
> than how effective their lobbyists are."
>
--
MFB