Corporate 1% in U.S. Gets Wealthier While Cash Piles Up
By Lorraine Woellert Aug 8, 2014 10:03 AM ET
Income inequality has company -- make that companies. A new wealth gap is opening among U.S. corporations, where cash holdings are growing more concentrated as the rich get richer.
Eighteen American businesses held 36 percent of corporate wealth in 2013, up from 27 percent in 2009, according to a report from Standard & Poors, a credit rating firm in New York. The bottom 80 percent have lost ground, with just 11 percent.
The top 1 percent is a Whos Who of multinationals, including Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Google Inc. (GOOG), Coca-Cola Co. (KO), Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Ford Motor Co. (F), that reap a big share of profits from non-U.S. sales. Because tax law discourages moving that money back to the U.S., cash is piling up abroad and companies are taking novel steps to adapt, including borrowing against those assets to finance operations at home.
Unlike individuals, corporations dont want to be in that top 1 percent, said analyst Andrew Chang, lead author of the S&P report. This rising cash balance among the richest is tax-policy driven.
American multinationals are taxed by the country where profits are earned and by the U.S. when -- or if -- the money is brought back. The corporate tax rate in the U.S., running up to 35 percent, is the highest in the industrialized world.
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