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Video Game Industry Big Winner When It Comes to Tax Breaks

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The Straight Story Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-11 08:19 AM
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Video Game Industry Big Winner When It Comes to Tax Breaks
Video Game Industry Big Winner When It Comes to Tax Breaks

While earning billions of dollars in revenues, America’s video game industry has enjoyed a variety of tax breaks from the U.S. government. Electronic Arts, for example, earned $1.2 billion in global profits over the past five years, but only paid $98 million in taxes worldwide for a rate of 8%.

The tax deductions, write-offs and credits that video game makers are using were established for other industries. In 1969, for example, before the video game industry had been born, the IRS created a tax break that allowed companies to deduct the cost of software development. Since developing software is a huge part of creating video games, the industry has gained a fortune by exploiting this loophole. Electronic Arts alone was able to write off almost $6 billion in expenses over the last five years.

Aggressive lawyers have also saved tens of millions dollars in taxes by taking advantage of research and development credits. Writing in The New York Times, David Kocieniewski points out that while the video game industry has enjoyed this tax rule, other industries have been stymied. “In 2009, for instance, the federal tax court denied Union Carbide’s attempt to claim a research and development credit for its project to reduce the pollutants released from the smokestacks of a refinery in Louisiana. Union Carbide failed to meet the experimental threshold for the credit, though video game makers often seem to have little trouble meeting the requirement.”

It’s no wonder that oil companies—notorious in their own right for their subsidies—have begun to complain about the beneficial treatment for game manufacturers.

http://www.allgov.com/Where_is_the_Money_Going/ViewNews/Video_Game_Industry_Big_Winner_When_It_Comes_to_Tax_Breaks_110913
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Southerner Donating Member (57 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-11 08:55 AM
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1. Although this tax credit may be responsible for keeping lots of software jobs in this country...
I think it should be changed to tax heavily any software developed outside the country and sold here in conjunction with removing any tax break for software developed in country.

We give about $125 billion in tax breaks a year to corporations. Time to wipe that all away and also raise the tariffs on imports. We have a dangerous budget deficit to tackle.
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white_wolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-13-11 09:04 AM
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2. Seriously?! Like EA needs a fucking tax break.
They are one of the biggest publishers in the industry and speaking as a gamer, one of the most hated. In fact I think they may be both the most hated and the biggest in the industry. No one likes EA. They have a reputation for buying out small, respected developers, and forcing them to rush their products or change them, thus ruining the company they bought. I'm waiting for them to ruin Bioware.
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