Wednesday, November 12, 2014
U.S. Corporate Overseas Cash Grows
U.S. corporate cash balances held overseas have reached $2.1 trillion,
a 600 percent increase over the past 12 years. In comparison, the
domestic U.S. corporate cash balance is $1.9 trillion. The major reason
for the growth in international cash balances is the U.S. tax policy
that taxes repatriated profits at the difference between the local tax
rate already paid and the U.S. corporate tax rate, which is one of the
highest in the world. Repatriating overseas cash does not necessarily
mean the cash will be used for investment. One study indicates during
the 2004 tax holiday, every dollar repatriated generated an $0.80
dividend payment and $0.15 share repurchase. While politicians may decry
the lost corporate tax revenue that arises with a repatriation tax
holiday, personal income taxes balloon with the increased dividends and
share repurchases.