The Tax Foundation

August 13, 2007

Number of Companies That Paid No Corporate Tax is Meaningless in Maryland, Other States

by Chris Atkins

A few weeks ago, the Washington Post reported on new figures related to Maryland's corporate tax system. The story cited a report by the Maryland Comptroller which showed that 68 out of the largest 132 Maryland employers paid no Maryland corporate tax in 2005. Naturally, many lawmakers and activists responded negatively, and they will surely use this data to argue that Maryland should enact combined reporting or some other measure to increase corporate tax revenues.

The fact that 68 out of 132 corporations paid no tax is a meaningless statistic, however, and tells us nothing about corporate tax sheltering. As such, these numbers should not be used by lawmakers to set corporate tax policy in Maryland or any other state.

There are a host of legitimate reasons why those 68 companies paid zero tax, including:

No one can seriously doubt that some companies are sheltering income to avoid corporate tax, and combined reporting is one possible tool that states can use to curtail erosion of their corporate tax base. But no state, including Maryland, should enact combined reporting because a report says that 68 out of 132 companies aren't paying any corporate tax, because by themselves those numbers tell us nothing about corporate tax evasion.

To read about the continuing pressure applied to state corporate tax systems by the 21st century economy, read our report called A Twentieth Century Tax in the Twenty-First Century: Understanding State Corporate Tax Systems.