The Fine Print: How Big Companies Use "Plain English" to Rob You Blind by David Cay Johnston
Suppose I buy a mannequin and house him in an apartment in say the Cayman Islands. Then I declare that he owns me - at least my intellect and by limbs, so that whatever I may do to earn an income, I'll be using his property. So I need to pay him royalty. He's one cruel master - he wants all my income (except may be my expenses for food and shelter.) So come tax time, I write off all my royalty expenses, leaving me with a very small income on which to pay tax. Hopefully, I'll be below the lowest bracket and not have to pay any taxes. Perhaps I may even qualify for some government benefits like social security. Meanwhile, my master the Mannequin takes all my income and has no taxes to pay, since he lives in a tax shelter. May be one day I'd want to buy a car or a house, in which case I can borrow money from my master. Of course, he'll demand a steep interest rate, which I'll get to write off on my taxes as well.
Sounds nuts? If you were a US corporation, you can do all this and much much more. Replace the mannequin with a "holding company", the "intellect and limbs" with patents/intellectual-property and brand/trademarks, social security with tax credits. And probably you don't even need to go all the way to the Caymans - something like Delaware would do.
The book itself is well written and full of clear explanations of complex subject matter. It may be a it tilted to the left, but the passion is to be expected if the author really cares about the subject, which is does.
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