[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 57 (Monday, April 3, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2176-S2177]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
By Mr. REED (for himself and Mr. Grassley):
S. 803. A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to deny tax
deductions for corporate regulatory violations; to the Committee on
Finance.
Mr. REED. Mr. President, today I am reintroducing, along with Senator
Grassley, the Government Settlement Transparency and Reform Act. This
bill closes a loophole in the Tax Code that allows corporations to
claim tax writeoffs for payments made at the direction of the
government to settle investigations into illegal and abusive corporate
behavior.
Corporations accused of illegal activity routinely settle out of
court with government agencies because it allows all parties to avoid
the time, expense, and uncertainty of going to trial. While there is
nothing wrong with settlements that correct wrongful corporate
practices and compensate for the resulting harm caused by a
corporation, the Tax Code often permits offending companies to claim a
business tax deduction for any portion of a settlement that is not paid
directly to the government as a penalty or fine for a violation of the
law. The Tax Code on this point is vague, and big businesses exploit
this by characterizing settlement penalties as tax-deductible business
expenses.
Illegal corporate behavior is not an ordinary business activity, and
it shouldn't be subsidized by taxpayers. Yet, according to a 2015 study
by U.S. Public Interest Research Group, PIRG, corporate settlements
over a single 3-year period totaled nearly $80 billion, and
corporations could claim business deductions for at least $48 billion
of that amount. Moreover, there is no consistent, transparent way to
track how these settlements can and will be treated by businesses for
tax purposes.
The Reed-Grassley bill addresses these problems by amending the Tax
[[Page S2177]]
Code to require the government and the settling party to reach clear
agreements on how settlement payments should be treated for tax
purposes. It also clarifies which settlement payments are punitive and
therefore nondeductible. It increases transparency by requiring the
government to file a return at the time of settlement that accurately
states the tax treatment of amounts to be paid by offending businesses.
Last Congress, it was estimated that this legislation would raise $218
million in revenue over a ten-year budget window.
When a major corporate scandal breaks national news, Rhode Islanders
and all Americans deserve to know that Federal regulators are
protecting their interests by handing down punishments that deter
future illegal and abusive business practices. That deterrent effect is
undermined if corporations can claim a deduction for any penalty and
build the cost of breaking the law into their business models.
I want to thank Senator Grassley for working with me again on this
legislation and for being a champion for reform in this area. I urge
our colleagues to join us by cosponsoring this legislation and seeking
its passage.
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