December 2001 - VOLUME 22 - NUMBER 12
B E H I N D T H E L I N E S
The $5,000 FlashlightRemember the $450 hammer and the $600 toilet seat? That was the Reagan
era. Now theres the $5,600 toothbrush and the $5,000 flashlight.
A report released in November by Senator Byron Dorgan, D-North Dakota,
reveals that multinationals operating in the United States may have avoided
up to $45 billion in federal income taxes last year by using phony pricing
schemes in order to move profits earned in the United States to other
countries where they are not subject to taxation. The study, conducted by the Center for Banking and Financial Institutions
at Florida International University in Miami, Florida, calculated the
cost to the U.S. Treasury of overpriced imports and underpriced exports.
Simon J. Pak, and John S. Zdanowicz, the authors of the study, estimate
that the pricing schemes cost U.S. taxpayers $35.7 billion in 1998 and
$42.7 billion in 1999. Pak and Zdanowicz say multinationals are able to move profits out of
the United States and into other countries by frequently and significantly
under-pricing goods purchased by their foreign affiliates, and by over-charging
for goods sold to their U.S. operations by foreign affiliates. Abnormally low-priced U.S. exports documented in the study include $3
non-industrial diamonds, $40 rocket launchers and $528 bulldozers. High-priced
imports include $5,600 toothbrushes and $5,000 flashlights. Every individual taxpayer and company is forced to make up the
differences with income taxes that are higher than they would need to
be if the international corporations who are avoiding their tax responsibility
were paying their fair share, Dorgan says. Franken-Free FoodSpecialty retail grocer Trader Joes announced in November that
it would no longer use any genetically engineered ingredients in its store
brand products. The announcement marks the first time that a major U.S. grocery chain
has dropped genetically engineered ingredients in response to a sustained
consumer campaign. Natural food chains Whole Foods and Wild Oats dropped
genetically engineered ingredients from their house brands two years ago. Our goal for existing private label products is to have all such
products reformulated, if necessary, and certified within one year,
the company said in a prepared statement. With Trader Joes getting rid of gene-altered ingredients,
grocery chains in the U.S. can no longer say, We cant do it
in this country, says Heather Whitehead of the Greenpeace
Genetic Engineering (GE) Campaign, which was joined in a year-long campaign
to get Trader Joes to make the GE-free commitment by the Organic
Consumers Association, Gene Wise and several other grassroots groups. Trader Joes warned its customers that while it intends to develop
a system of random testing to verify their vendors assertions that
their products are GE-free, there is no system in the United States
to completely guard against adventitious contamination from
the genetic drift by genetically engineered crops to non-genetically engineered
crops. Therefore, it is not possible for any supplier or retailer to realistically
offer any guarantee that their products are GMO-free.
(GMO stands for genetically modified organisms.) Various European countries require the labeling of genetically engineered
food, but the United States has no labeling laws. Trader Joes is
urging its customers to pressure Congress and the Food and Drug Association
to require GE products to be labeled. While there is a great deal of passion regarding this matter among
customers and the public at large, it is clear to us that if given the
opportunity, the majority of our customers would prefer to have products
made without genetically engineered ingredients, the company said
in its statement. Dirty Clothes Line
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