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On Tea and Taxes

July 23, 2009

By Ann Hollingshead

Ann Hollingshead is a Task Force blog contributor, whose posts appear on Wednesdays and Fridays. Formerly a Junior Economist at Global Financial Integrity, Ann is now a Research Analyst for ECONorthwest, an economic consulting firm in the Pacific Northwest. Follow her on Twitter: @AnnHollingshead.

One evening in November 1773, colonists disguised as Mohawk Indians threw 342 chests of tea into the Boston Harbor.  Later dubbed the Boston Tea Party, the protest was in dissent of what colonists believed to be unfair taxation by the interfering British Empire.  This sentiment reverberated throughout the colonies, escalating until the colonists were freed from their oppressors many years later.   Little did they know, but there are easier ways to use tea to avoid taxes.

A few weeks ago I wrote a blog about illicit financial flows, which are bundles of money that are sneaked out of developing countries illegally (see 10 times ODA, but what is that in Apple Pies?).  IFFs can be sent out for various purposes—to launder money, evade taxes, or skirt capital controls.

In response to this blog, one reader asked “who wins (specifically) and who ‘loses’ (specifically) through these shadowy flows?”  To illustrate the answer, I will use the example of Tai-Fu Chen, a wealthy Taiwanese immigrant in California who, like the Boston colonials, used tea to evade taxes.  Tai-Fu didn’t throw any of his tea into a harbor, though.  He used trade mispricing.

Trade mispricing occurs when a company or an individual shifts wealth between countries, using either export under-invoicing or import over-invoicing.  Individuals like Tai-Fu Chen, whose U.S. based company sold herbs and spices from the Far East.  So how does it work?  Suppose Tai-Fu is importing $100 worth of tea leaves from Taiwan.  Instead of paying $100, Tai-Fu reports and pays $200.  Tai-Fu’s trading partner takes $100 for the tea and shifts the extra $100 to a secret Taiwanese bank account (and maybe keeps an extra few dollars as a transaction fee).  Now Tai-Fu doesn’t have to pay taxes on the $100.

Tai-Fu repeated this practice many times over on a much larger scale, eventually shifting millions in profits to Asia.  In additional real world examples, other U.S. companies imported tweezers from Japan for $4,896 apiece and razor blades from Great Britain for $113 each.  The winners are the companies and individuals, like Tai-Fu Chen.

So who loses?  The IRS loses and the American taxpayers lose.  Well, actually, in this story the interfering, but resourceful, IRS eventually caught up with Tai-Fu and his tax-avoiding tea. Tai-Fu had to pay $93 million in back taxes to the IRS, $4 million to U.S. customs, and then went to jail for two years.  Although tedious and a bit dramatic, looks like throwing tea into harbors was a better way to avoid taxes after all.

It doesn’t always work out so well.  Most developing countries don’t have well-funded government branches like the IRS to root out men like Tai-Fu.  So these countries hemorrhage hundreds of billions of dollars a year to the practice.

In an effort to root out his problem, the Task Force advocates requiring parties conducting an international transaction to sign a statement in the commercial invoice certifying that no trade mispricing had taken place.  Maybe it’s a distant goal, but we dream of day that tea leaves are no longer used to avoid taxes, but just for hot water and drinking.  Like God and the British intended.

Disclaimer: Unless specifically stated to be the views of the Task Force, the opinions expressed on this blog are solely the opinions of the individual blogger and are not necessarily those of the Task Force on Financial Integrity & Economic Development.

  • Dev Kar

    Excellent article, Ann. I enjoyed reading it. I would note that the U.S. Customs are at the front lines of combating trade mispricing and the IRS often acts on its recommendations regarding such practices. Now, GFI’s study Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries: 2002-2006 showed that trade mispricing based on the US’s trade with partner countries extrapolated globally is lower than what the IMF’s Direction of Trade Statistics (DOTS)-based trade mispricing shows. This is because foreign exporters and importers trading with the US are not able to misprice trade to the same extent as they are able to do with other countries, particularly where the IRS and Customs counterparts are weaker and there are also governance issues.

    Your illustration involving the over-invoicing involving tea to escape taxes was excellent. Actually, the calculation in the mind of the importer is a net calculation–the higher customs duties payable on the over-invoiced versus the higher payment of taxes on his profits. To the extent that taxation of marginal profits is higher than import duties, the incentive to over-invoice imports is very much there. In developing countries, over-invoicing would take place even if profit taxes were lower, if the importer wants to take advantage of say preferential exchange rates for importers (tea is not a good example) or wants to stash foreign currency abroad (because of foreign exchange controls)–a consideration not applicable in the case of US importers.

    • Richard Ferguson

      I agree this is probably a common practice amongst businesses,but I believe the bigger culprit may be the hundreds of millions, maybe billions, of laundered funds flows between wall st banks and their overseas partners. Until this administration turns back the clock to Depression era regulation, this will probably continue. A very good friend of mine handles litigation for major clients out of rockefeller center. His opinion is that when you have free flow capitalism with no limits, human nature is such that it doesn’t matter whether you make $10million, the arbitrage becomes a shell game and ego prevails. Who can make it to $20M?, 30M? more?…And the best minds in business are down there strategizing with their in house attorneys on how to get around the existing legal regulation to invent new ways to turn on the spigot. Tighter regulation and more resources will help, but it will always be a struggle to contain that most basic human nature…greed. Keep up the good work!

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