While President Bush was asking children to send in
a dollar and telling patriotic adults to buy war bonds, no sacrifice
was demanded of America's biggest corporations. To the contrary, they
received the biggest handout in US history, with hundreds of billions
of dollars given away to companies that are downsizing their workforce
as rapidly as possible.
As the country mourned the working-class heroes in police and
fire departments and donated $1 billion to 9-11 charities, politicians
quietly honored a much different group with billions in subsidies:
the CEOs and big corporations. Many people say that "everything
changed" after 9-11. Unfortunately, one thing that hasn't changed
is the corporate pork enjoyed by rich corporations that donate huge
campaign gifts to politicians.
Profiteering during war is nothing new for American corporations.
But after 9-11, companies were "waving a flag and carrying a big
shovel," as Ralph Nader noted. Airlines were the first to line up
at the feeding trough. Democrats (influenced by the lobbying of
Linda Hall Daschle, the Senate majority leader's wife) and Republicans
united to give away $15 billion (and immunity from some lawsuits)
to airlines that were laying off thousands of employees.
The 9-11 attacks sent the Dow Jones plummeting 14% when trading
resumed a week later. However, a few companies benefited from the
minimum of $20 billion in new defense spending. Weapons company
Lockheed Martin's stock rose 15%. Raytheon, maker of the Patriot
missile, saw its stock increase by 21%. Northrop Grumman, which
builds the B2 bomber, had a stock increase of 16%.
Corporate lobbyists used 9-11 as justification for everything
from fast-track authority for "free trade" treaties to the "Farm
Security Act," which would provide $170 billion over 10 years in
expanded farm subsidies for corporate agribusiness. James Albertine,
president of the American League of Lobbyists, called it "a free-for-all."
One big corporate subsidy comes in the form of government laws
providing free insurance coverage. The Bush administration, for
example, wants to bail out the insurance industry by having the
government pay at least 90% of terrorist-related claims.
In November, a House committee approved a 15-year extension of
the Price-Anderson Act without debate, an act that commits federal
funds for any liability to the nuclear energy industry beyond $9
billion for a nuclear accident.
While the media gave enormous coverage to the $1 billion donated
by the American people to relief efforts, they barely noticed the
efforts by our politicians to give far more money to America's corporations.
The idea that the economy works best when Americans spend themselves
deep into debt is never questioned in the mainstream press, because
their advertisers only want the public to hear the message of spending
more. When adbusters.org tried to buy ads for "Buy Nothing Day,"
the broadcast networks refused to accept them.
The biggest corporate welfare package comes in the form of tax
cuts. Like the $1.3 trillion tax cut, the proposed $210 billion
economic stimulus package stimulates the rich a lot more than the
poor: 70% of the money will go to corporations.
"Late last winter, when President Bush was shaping
his $1.35 trillion tax cut, corporate lobbyists were told to wait,
their turn would come. And now, their turn is here," noted a New
York Times (Oct. 27) report. The tax cut aimed at the wealthiest
Americans is now being magnified by a tax cut aimed at the wealthiest
corporations.
One of the biggest boondoggles is the repeal of
the alternative minimum tax, which was imposed on companies in 1986
to prevent profitable corporations from evading taxes. In addition,
companies will receive a $25 billion tax rebate for previous payments,
including $1.4 billion given away to IBM, $833 million to General
Motors, $671 million to General Electric, and $254 million to Enron.
About $6.3 billion would go to 14 corporations, who together gave
nearly $15 million in soft money donations to Democrats and Republicans
in recent years.
The government must increase efforts to stop corporations
from evading taxes. While individual payments under the alternative
minimum tax increased from $830 million in 1990 to $5 billion in
1998, corporate payments have dropped from $8.1 billion in 1990
to $3.3 billion in 1998.
Although the corporate tax rate is supposed to
be 35%, big corporations use tax loopholes to avoid paying their
share. According to Citizens for Tax Justice, the effective corporate
tax rate has dropped from 26.5 percent in 1988 to only 20.1 percent
in 1998. General Motors made $2.9 billion and paid only 1.5% for
taxes. IBM had profits of $5.7 billion, yet it paid only 10.8% in
taxes last year-it would have paid 7.6% without the alternative
minimum tax. Another tax cut provision to accelerate depreciation
expenses would cost $39 billion per year. Since most states follow
federal rules, money-starved state governments would also lose billions
every year.
Conservatives believe that what's good for corporations
is good for America. This is trickle-down-the-flag economics, a
kind of supply-side patriotism that somebody named Bush once called
"voodoo economics."
Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Tex.) responded in full trickle-down
mode, writing to the Wall Street Journal (Oct. 19) that "the first
lesson in economics I learned was that no poor person would ever
offer me a job." Apparently, Gramm doesn't think the poor voters
of Texas elected him, only the rich campaign donors.
After a decade of record profits, America's corporations
aren't the ones who suffer most from an economic downtown. "The
Republican package shamelessly raids the Treasury at a time of crisis
on behalf of the wealthiest corporations and barely throws a bone
to unemployed workers," noted Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Il).
The theme of patriotic shopping is one way to
distract attention from corporate welfare. Vice President Cheney
declared that he hoped Americans would "not let what's happened
here in any way throw off their normal level of economic activity."
Local officials in Florida declared "Freedom Weekend" for people
to do their patriotic shopping, and www.americaopenforbusiness.org
created one million posters featuring an American flag with shopping
bag handles.
Americans responded to 9-11 with an outpouring
of generosity. American corporations responded with an outstretched
hand, grabbing billions of dollars in subsidies and tax cuts. For
corporate America to use the tragic deaths of thousands of people
as an excuse to make more money isn't just war profiteering, it's
grave robbing.