How Amazon Pays $0.00 In Taxes (Yes, Legally) - YouTube

Channel: Business Casual

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Amazon: the second biggest employer in America, behind only Walmart.
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Not only has Amazon elevated Jeff Bezos to the top of the world鈥檚 richest people list,
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it is also one of the most notorious tax avoiders in American history.
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In this video we鈥檙e gonna see how Amazon very legally paid $0 in federal taxes during
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2018 and we鈥檙e gonna learn just how dubious its methods really are.
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This video is brought to you by Skillshare, who, as you know, are pretty awesome so go
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check them out.
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Amazon has had a tough start to 2019.
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Between New York giving Jeff Bezos the boot and Amazon stock being down 20% since last
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year鈥檚 highs, it鈥檚 safe to say that Amazon has been playing on the back foot so far.
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And yet, 2018 was a record year: Amazon more than doubled its profit to $11 billion and
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more importantly got to pay $0 in income taxes on it.
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So how does Amazon do it?
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Unsurprisingly, the answer is accounting, and it鈥檚 actually not as complicated or
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as boring as you might imagine.
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Amazon, like everyone else, reduces its tax bill by using deductions, but unlike you or
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me, Amazon has access to much more lucrative deductions that can be grouped in three different
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categories, some more reasonable than others.
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The first and cleanest sort of deduction Amazon makes use of is the research and development
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tax credit, which works in a rather simple manner.
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Roughly 7% of what Amazon spends on wages and supplies for its R&D department, they
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get to claim as a deduction, which makes sense: Congress would love to see America remain
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a technological superpower and what better way to encourage innovation than by handing
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out tax deductions.
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In 2018 Amazon saved almost one and a half billion dollars thanks to the R&D credits,
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but that鈥檚 just the start of it.
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As you know, in 2017 President Trump did his big revision to the US tax code and one of
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the things he slipped in there is a temporary boost to one form of deductions, specifically
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depreciation.
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Whereas in the past companies had to depreciate (or write off) their property and equipment
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over many years, usually decades, Trump鈥檚 tax revision allows companies to skip this
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process entirely, getting the full tax benefit from the very start.
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In other words, when Amazon builds a new data center, for example, it gets to claim the
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full cost of it as a tax deduction now instead of spreading it out over the course of 40
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years.
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Now, this particular provision in the tax code is gonna last until 2022, but you can
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already see the impact it has now: Amazon鈥檚 depreciation has increased by 40% in 2018.
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Unfortunately it鈥檚 not possible to know exactly how much of that new depreciation
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is motivated by the favorable tax revision, but it鈥檚 probably safe to assume that it
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had at least some effect.
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Now, the final and sleaziest sort of deduction Amazon takes is thanks to its use of stock-based
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compensation and it鈥檚 a very sneaky one.
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You know how all the big corporations pay their senior employees not in cold, hard cash,
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but in stocks?
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Well, they do that not out of the kindness of their hearts or because they鈥檙e so concerned
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about employee ownership, but rather for a much simpler reason: it saves them a lot of
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money.
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You see, when Amazon pays its employees in stock, it gets to deduct the value of the
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stock it gave just as you would deduct a regular wage.
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But there鈥檚 a huge issue here, because Amazon did not actually pay anything for the shares
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it gave out.
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It didn鈥檛 go and buy them off of the market: no, it just created them out of thin air because
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it can, in the same way that the Fed can print new dollars.
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The ones who actually pay for this charade are the Amazon stockholders, whose existing
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shares are worth less because Amazon is constantly creating more of them to pay its employees.
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This strategy works, as long as the stock price keeps going up: and the only stock that鈥檚
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gone up more than Amazon in the past decade is, surprisingly, Domino鈥檚 Pizza.
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But in any case, this brilliant strategy not only makes Amazon鈥檚 wages effectively free
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for the company, it also gives it a huge tax deduction: in 2018, Amazon saved a billion
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dollars by paying its employees in shares it created for free.
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Now, you鈥檙e probably wondering why doesn鈥檛 everybody do this?
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After all, the laws that govern Amazon apply to every other company in exactly the same
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way and the answer is Jeff Bezos; no, the real answer is that most companies struggle
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to keep their stock price going up without constantly buying back their own shares.
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Stock buybacks are extremely popular and Amazon is actually one of the few companies that
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doesn鈥檛 do them.
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Most companies first go to the stock market to buy their own shares, which increases their
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price, and then they hand them out to their employees, and it mostly balances out.
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But Jeff Bezos just skips the buying part because he鈥檚 confident that the stock is
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gonna increase on its own, and indeed it does.
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In a way, you can argue that Bezos is the ultimate Wolf of Wall Street because he鈥檚
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honestly he鈥檚 making billions off of this.
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We鈥檙e gonna hear each again in two weeks, and until then: stay smart.