Archive for the ‘Blogs’ Category

Corporate America’s Paid Holiday




Jun

28



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

28/06/2011 09:32 
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Its not just Bono and Vodafone that are trying hard to avoid paying tax, the same is happening in the USA.

Phil Mattera of Dirt Diggers Digest tells all.

According to the old saying, insanity can be defined as doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. But what do you call corporate executives who want the country to adopt a business tax policy that has failed miserably in the past? Crazy like a fox.

Such self-serving fiscal delusion is on full display in the current push for a “repatriation holiday.” A slew of major U.S.-based corporations are proposing that they be allowed to bring home many billions of dollars in largely untaxed overseas profits and, for a limited time, pay only a fraction of the statutory rate. According to a corporate front group called Working to Invest Now in America, or WinAmerica, this is “a common sense solution that will immediately inject up to $ 1 trillion into our economy and provide businesses with the security and certainty they need to help get Americans back to work.”

The group should really be called ConAmerica. The corporate titans are proposing a scheme that was tried and failed miserably only a few years ago, not to mention the fact that it would reward big business for practices that already deprive the country of huge amounts of tax revenue and countless jobs.

First, a bit of background. Although the U.S. Internal Revenue Code is designed to tax corporations on their worldwide profits, it contains a provision that allows companies to defer paying domestic taxes on overseas earnings as long as they stay with a firm’s foreign affiliates.

That may sound reasonable to some, but what corporate giants designate as overseas profits actually includes disguised domestic earnings. That’s because corporate tax dodging frequently takes the form of accounting gimmicks that shift reported earnings to subsidiaries in tax haven countries like the Cayman Islands and Bermuda.

This is done in a variety of ways. A company may transfer ownership of valuable patents and trademarks to a tax haven subsidiary, which then collects royalties from other parts of the company. Earnings stripping is a similar ploy that involves bogus interest payments. And then there’s the big daddy of multinational tax schemes: transfer pricing. This is the practice of exchanging goods and services among parts of a corporation at rates that have little relation to real costs.

The objective of all these tricks is to maximize reported income in countries that subject profits to minimum taxation—or none at all. Thanks to the deferral rule, a lot less is paid to Uncle Sam. It is estimated that transfer pricing costs the U.S. Treasury more than $ 28 billion a year.

Having engaged in this brazen tax dodging, corporations now want the right to bring the profits back home and get another tax break through the repatriation holiday. Their complaints about the need from relief from U.S. tax rates sound a lot like those of the proverbial murder who kills his parents and then pleads for sympathy as an orphan.

What makes the chutzpah quotient of the repatriation holiday advocates even higher is that they are promoting the idea in the face of documented evidence of its ineffectiveness. In 2004 a similar big business campaign succeeded in getting Congress to enact a repatriation holiday that brought the statutory tax rate on the returning profits down to 5.25 percent for the following year only. The plan was dressed up as the Homeland Investment Act, which was part of the American Jobs Creation Act.

The 2005 tax holiday was hailed as a success by corporate apologists for repatriating some $ 312 billion in profits for more than 800 large companies led by pharmaceutical giants Pfizer, Merck and Eli Lilly.

What they don’t emphasize is that the plan was a dismal failure in its stated purpose of generating jobs and investment in the United States. This should not have come as a complete surprise, since Congress allowed companies to use the repatriated profits for other purposes such as acquisitions and repayment of debt. Another factor was the old problem of the fungibility of money.

According to an analysis produced for the National Bureau of Economic Research, the 2005 repatriation holiday did not lead to an increase in domestic investment, domestic employment or R&D spending. The biggest impact, the report found, was an increase in stock buybacks by corporations, which was not one of the intended purposes of the legislation.

In other words, the tax holiday was a scam. Instead of stimulating job growth, it served as yet another way for large corporations to continue shrinking their contribution to the costs of running the U.S. government that serves them so well. In fact, some of the companies that benefited most from the holiday—such as Merck—carried out large-scale layoffs of U.S. workers during the time they were bringing those profits home.

Six years later, the same misleading claims are being made for repeating the practice that did so little good. What makes this especially frustrating is that it is taking place not long after Barack Obama made the issue of deferred taxes an issue in his presidential election campaign and then sought to increase taxation of foreign profits during his first year in office.  Those plans have been forgotten, and now the repatriation holiday proponents are riding high, despite estimates that the scheme would result in a loss of $ 78 billion in federal revenues over the next decade.

Fortunately, not everyone is being taken in by WinAmerica. Along with stalwart critics such as Citizens for Tax Justice—which calls the idea “amnesty for corporate tax dodgers”—the repatriation holiday is being attacked by newer groups such as US Uncut, whose main target is WinAmerica ringleader Apple Inc.

One of US Uncut’s slogans is “Tax Dodging. Is there an app for that?” Actually, no app is necessary as long as Congress goes on buying the tax-break snake oil of Corporate America.

This article was first published on the Dirt Diggers Digest site (June 23rd, 2011)


Ethical Consumer Blog

Hecla forced to pay




Jun

23



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

23/06/2011 10:28 
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The Hecla Mining Company agreed to pay $ 263 million plus interest to resolve a lawsuit dating back 20 years.

In 1991 Hecla and other mining companies were sued by the Coeur d’Alene tribe over damages to natural resources in Idaho’s Silver Valley caused by some 100 million tons of toxic mining waste released into local waterways over the decades. A smelter used by the companies caused massive lead emissions that contaminated soil and showed up at high levels in the bloodstream of local children.


According to the Dirt Diggers Digest, the corporate defendants made the clean-up process as difficult and time-consuming as possible. One company, Gulf Resources and Chemical, went bankrupt in the 1990s, leaving little in the way of assets. Another, Asarco, also filed for bankruptcy in 2005 in an apparent attempt to sidestep huge environmental liabilities around the country, but the U.S. Justice Department was later able to get the company that took it over, Grupo Mexico, to pay $ 1.8 billion for cleanup costs at more than 80 toxic sites in 19 states, including $ 436 million for the Bunker Hill site.

The settlement also includes a process for co-ordinating Hecla’s future mining operations with cleanup activities in the Coeur d’Alene Basin.  “This agreement will help pay for the U.S. government’s clean-up activities, secures natural resource damages, and will restore critical habitats to fish and wildlife in the Coeur d’Alene River Basin.”  said Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division at the Department of Justice.

“This settlement means cleanup and mining can now move forward together in the Silver Valley,” said Dennis McLerran, EPA Regional Administrator in Seattle. “Today’s agreement not only provides more money for cleanup, but helps lay the foundation for a stronger future: one built on mining stewardship, a healthier environment and a growing, vibrant economy.”

The area of contamination was once one of the largest silver producing districts in the world. As a result, the basin has been contaminated by the release of metals like lead and arsenic. EPA began cleanup at the site in the 1980s, focusing on protecting human health. Although measurable improvements in public and environmental health have been achieved, widespread contamination remains a challenge and cleanup work will continue for many years.

Chief J. Allan, Chairman of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe said “The tribe is hopeful that this settlement marks a new chapter in the stewardship of the land we all hold dear. The tribe stands together with the United States, the state of Idaho and Hecla to restore our natural resources while we continue to provide economic prosperity to the region.”


Ethical Consumer Blog

Heclad into paying




Jun

23



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

23/06/2011 10:28 
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The Hecla Mining Company agreed to pay $ 263 million plus interest to resolve a lawsuit dating back 20 years.

In 1991 Hecla and other mining companies were sued by the Coeur d’Alene tribe over damages to natural resources in Idaho’s Silver Valley caused by some 100 million tons of toxic mining waste released into local waterways over the decades. A smelter used by the companies caused massive lead emissions that contaminated soil and showed up at high levels in the bloodstream of local children.


According to the Dirt Diggers Digest, the corporate defendants made the clean-up process as difficult and time-consuming as possible. One company, Gulf Resources and Chemical, went bankrupt in the 1990s, leaving little in the way of assets. Another, Asarco, also filed for bankruptcy in 2005 in an apparent attempt to sidestep huge environmental liabilities around the country, but the U.S. Justice Department was later able to get the company that took it over, Grupo Mexico, to pay $ 1.8 billion for cleanup costs at more than 80 toxic sites in 19 states, including $ 436 million for the Bunker Hill site.

The settlement also includes a process for co-ordinating Hecla’s future mining operations with cleanup activities in the Coeur d’Alene Basin.  “This agreement will help pay for the U.S. government’s clean-up activities, secures natural resource damages, and will restore critical habitats to fish and wildlife in the Coeur d’Alene River Basin.”  said Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division at the Department of Justice.

“This settlement means cleanup and mining can now move forward together in the Silver Valley,” said Dennis McLerran, EPA Regional Administrator in Seattle. “Today’s agreement not only provides more money for cleanup, but helps lay the foundation for a stronger future: one built on mining stewardship, a healthier environment and a growing, vibrant economy.”

The area of contamination was once one of the largest silver producing districts in the world. As a result, the basin has been contaminated by the release of metals like lead and arsenic. EPA began cleanup at the site in the 1980s, focusing on protecting human health. Although measurable improvements in public and environmental health have been achieved, widespread contamination remains a challenge and cleanup work will continue for many years.

Chief J. Allan, Chairman of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe said “The tribe is hopeful that this settlement marks a new chapter in the stewardship of the land we all hold dear. The tribe stands together with the United States, the state of Idaho and Hecla to restore our natural resources while we continue to provide economic prosperity to the region.”


Ethical Consumer Blog

Fools Gold Mine




Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:06 
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Home of the worlds largest wild salmon fishery is now the proposed home for the largest open pit mine in North America.

Construction of the Pebble Mine in Bristol Bay, Alaska is likely to result in long term damage to people and ecosystems, including that of the worlds largest wild sockeye salmon fishery.  According to the campaign group ‘Save Bristol Bay’, if built, the mine could produce up to 10 billion tonnes of toxic mine waste which would require water treatment for hundreds of years.

“This project will jeopardize the fishery that supplies 50% of the world’s commercial supply of sockeye salmon,” said Bob Waldrop, director of the Bristol Bay Regional Seafood Development Association, which represents approximately 2, 000 commercial fishermen.

Even its investors are wary of the project. Major American and UK investor organisations led by Trillium Asset Management and Calvert Investments have released an open letter to America’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), urging it to exercise its authority under the country’s Clean Water Act to safeguard Bristol Bay.

“Ecosystem degradation is of serious concern to investors,” said the letter made public on 12 April by nearly 30 investment organizations representing over £105 billion in assets. The letter outlines concerns not only for potential environmental risks, but in light of recent BP issues, the latent costs that such an eventuality could incur (they say approximately 50% of company earnings are at risk).

Local campaigners have also raised concerns. “Six Tribes of Bristol Bay asked the EPA to use its authority to protect the world’s most valuable wild salmon fishery and we stand with them along with the Bristol Bay Native Corporation. We remain confident that EPA will make the right decision to protect the salmon and people of Bristol Bay.” said Kimberly Williams, executive director of Nunamta Aulukestai, an association of nine village corporations, the regional corporation and Tribes representing more than half of the Alaska Native People of Bristol Bay.

“With the clear majority of Bristol Bay residents opposing the mine, I’d really like to know why Anglo American CEO Cynthia Carroll is moving forward without community consent as required by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People,” added MP Martin Horwood, a member of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tribal Peoples.

Despite nearly 80% of locals voicing opposition to the mine, Anglo American and partner Northern Dynasty Minerals continue to push the project forward. With fiscal 2010 turnover of $ 28 bn, Anglo American PLC is one of the worlds largest producers of base metals, coal, diamonds, iron ore, and platinum. Despite cost cutting plans that will see it sell businesses worth £3bn this year they have their sights set on expansion into Bristol Bay area. Meanwhile a recent article from ADA states that the Pebble Partnership (Anglo American and Northern Dynasty) spent more than any other sector, even oil, on lobbying the Alaskan Legislature last year.

Find out more at www.savebristolbay.org


Ethical Consumer Blog

Tackling Timber Trafficking




Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:08 
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EU and Indonesia finalise new trade agreement to restrict the flow of illegal timber into Europe.

Greenpeace estimate that up to 90 percent of logging currently taking place in Indonesia is Illegal. It is hoped that the new Voluntary Partnership Agreement (VPA), signed by the EU and Indonesia and the first of its kind in Asia, will help reduce this number and a begin to better govern a trade estimated to be worth about US$ 1 billion a year.

Indonesia is a leading supplier to the world’s legal timber market. However the global supply of wood failing to satisfy increasing demand coupled with unsatisfactory law enforcement and forest management in the country has also become a major source of illegally harvested timber.

This is bad news for the environment in a country that possesses 123 million hectares of forest, equal to 10 per cent of global forest cover including the third largest tropical rainforest.   The Indonesian Ministry of Forestry estimates that in recent years, the country has lost between 1.6 million and 2.8 million hectares of forest annually (between 3 and 5 hectares a minute) to illegal logging and land conversion.

The Environmental Investigation Agency say the new VPA is a massive blow to the timber barons who have long been pillaging Indonesia’s precious rainforests, to satisfy the global market. Under the scheme, timber that is legally exported to the EU would be identified by means of licences issued in signatory countries. Timber shipments to the EU from partner countries that do not have a VPA permit would be denied entry under the Agreement.

The VPA is a key plank of the EU’s Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade (FLEGT) initiative which is seeking to establish systems to halt the sale of illegal timber products to the EU and address forest governance issues.

In Indonesia all timber production will be subjected to a national timber legality assurance system known as the Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu (SVLK). This will include independent auditing by accredited auditors and independent monitoring.

These agreements are a culmination of more than a decade of relentless campaigning by the London-based Environmental Investigation Agency and its Indonesian partner Telapak who have fought to expose the criminals involved in illegal logging and lobby for legislative change.

“This is an incredibly important milestone,” said EIA Senior Campaigner Faith Doherty, who in 2000, along with an Indonesian colleague, was kidnapped, beaten, and held at gunpoint to surrender evidence of the widespread forestry crime in Indonesia, discovered by EIA and Telapak. He continued “Things have come a long way from the early days of EIA’s work in Indonesia with Telapak, when we began to reveal the extent of illegal logging and its appalling environmental and social costs, and to expose the major criminal operations running it and the corruption allowing them to do so.”


Ethical Consumer Blog

Thai Fishing and Slavery




Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:10 
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UK Consumers are urged to think twice about buying fish potentially sourced from Thailand’s ‘floating prisons’.

An escaped ‘slave’ fisherman, Zaws Zaw, has told the BBC how he was illegally trafficked from Burma to Thailand where he was the sold to work on a fishing vessel. Thailand is the UK’s largest supplier of fish (namely Tuna and Prawns) and campaigners are urging consumers to think twice before buy fish caught by the Thai feet, one of the largest in the world.

Zaw Zaw’s story is one of brutality, drugging, and cruelty. Forced to work 18 hour days and take amphetamines in order maintain a fast pace of work, he witnessed the murder of fellow enslaved crew members. But as shocking as it is, it’s far from unique.

Reports have shown that migrants from countries including Cambodia, Burma, Ghana, and Bangladesh, have been sold or misled into forced labour aboard what CNN describe as “floating prisons crewed by slaves” in Thailand.

Motivated by fear to work long hours with little sleep and no financial reward, conditions for the slaves are dire. CNN reported that one victim considered murder to be rife. With those who succumb to illness or exhaustion, being killed and thrown overboard, “their nets sometimes snagged bodies of crew dumped from other ships.” 

The Thai authorities say they cannot comment on individual cases, but insist laws are in place and they are doing what they can to stop the abuses and to regulate Thailand’s huge fishing fleet. However the Environmental Justice Foundation states that “Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) or ‘pirate’ fishing is devastating marine environments… and is unsustainable. It is driven by the enormous global demand for seafood and is symptomatic of the wider crises in world fisheries.”

Human rights groups now want consumers to pressure the Thai government to regulate the industry more efficiently, and insist that more could and should be done to put an end to such injustices.


Andy Hall works with a human rights group for Burmese migrants in Thailand. He believes people in Britain and around the world should be aware of what they are buying. “What we would say is when you buy your fish, and that fish comes from Thailand, it’s coming from an industry where there is a gross exploitation of people who are trafficked into the industry, who are working such long hours in inhumane conditions.” He added, “The people who are receiving this fish need to be demanding that the Thai government regulate the fishing industry and ensure that the exploitation is reduced, because at the moment it is a very serious problem.”


Ethical Consumer Blog

Is your furniture made from illegally-logged wood?





Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:12 
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We name the most sustainable furniture shops and garden furniture

Choosing furniture presents consumers with some tough ethical issues – forests, finance, factory farming and forced labour.

Our Buyers’ Guide to furniture shops includes:

  • ethical and environmental ratings for 27 Furniture Shops and 24 Garden Furniture Shops throughout the UK
  • Best Buy recommendations
  • profiles of selected companies
  • whether to buy new or second hand
  • unique comparison of companies’ wood sourcing policies
  • which is the greenest type of wood to buy
  • what all the wood labels mean
  • green furniture directory
  • the global timber trade
  • the carbon cost of different materials

Download the Buyers’ Guide now as a pdf for £3 (free to subscribers).

The pdf includes:

  • all the stories from our database that we used to rate the brands
  • details of company ownership and full contact details

Alternatively, subscribe to Ethical Consumer and as part of your subscription you’ll get the Furniture Shop Buyers’ Guide in the latest magazine which also includes a Buyers’ Guide to sweets.

Plus, your subscription gives you online access to these buyer’s guides and over 180 others, all with ratings that are updated daily and can be customised to fit in with your values.

Introductory offer price of just £29.95 a year - cancel at any time in the first four weeks for a full refund!

  ”Ethical Consumer is a real inspiration and a helpful guide to an increasingly complex world!”

Mrs Barker, Exeter

“A great source of information for concerned citizens and campaigners alike.”

Ian, London


Ethical Consumer Blog

Who’s the sweetest of the sweet makers?





Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:14 
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We reveal the top 5 ethical sweets

It’s not all sweetness and light, especially not for the Brazilian workers who supply a little known common ingredient of sweets.

Our Buyers’ Guide to sweets includes:

  • ethical and environmental ratings for 54 brands of sweets
  • Best Buy recommendations
  • profiles of selected companies
  • Fairtrade, organic, veggie and vegan sweets
  • murky marketing practices
  • the Brazilian workers behind a common ingredient

Download the Buyers’ Guide now as a pdf for £3.

The pdf includes:

  • all the stories from our database that we used to rate the brands
  • details of company ownership and full contact details

Alternatively, subscribe to Ethical Consumer and as part of your subscription you’ll also get the Furniture Shops and Garden Furniture Buyers’ Guide in the latest magazine.

Plus, your annual subscription gives you online access, from computer or phone, to these buyer’s guides and over 180 others. All with ratings that are updated daily and can be customised to fit in with your values.

Introductory offer price of just £29.95 a year - cancel at any time in the first four weeks for a full refund!

  ”Ethical Consumer is a real inspiration and a helpful guide to an increasingly complex world!”

Mrs Barker, Exeter

“A great source of information for concerned citizens and campaigners alike.”

Ian, London


Ethical Consumer Blog

Global Boycott Procter & Gamble Day





Jun

1



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

01/06/2011 10:15 
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Join the boycott on Saturday 14th May

This year is the 15th year that animal rights group Uncaged have run a Boycott P&G Day.

This year, in order to ramp up the effectiveness of this day of action, they’re encouraging campaigners to focus on one of P&G’s most infamous brands – ‘Herbal Essences’.

Uncaged launched the boycott of Herbal Essences (a P&G hair care brand) in July 2008 when they revealed that P&G scientists had poisoned and killed over a thousand animals and their babies in a gratuitous test for a chemical ingredient (butylparaben) already in use by humans for decades.

Get involved by organising or helping with a Boycott P&G event in your area. Click here for a downloadable in-depth guide to participating in Global Boycott P&G Day. ‘Herbal Essences’ materials can be downloaded from here.

Actions can include protests, stunts, street theatre, stalls and leafleting in town centres and at supermarkets/personal care stores (e.g. Boots). You can also help by organising protests at P&G sites, or displays and information events at your college, library, health-food shop, or workplace, and/or by firing off letters to all your regional media and online forums.

If you are unable to organise an event yourself but would like to join in with something local, please let us know and we can help put you in touch with any actions in your area.

Click here for the full list of P&G brands to boycott throughout the year.

Check out our free Shampoo Buyers’ Guide with a simple scorecard to find out what brand of shampoo to buy instead of Herbal Essences.

Subscribe to see the full buyers’ guide which will show you how each company scored in our 3 animal rights categories.


Ethical Consumer Blog

Does Barbie kill tigers?





Jun

6



Written by:
ECRA Bloggers

06/06/2011 08:38 
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Greenpeace take on toy makers over rainforest destruction

Greenpeace has gone into campaign overdrive turning its attention to toy maker Mattel over its use of packaging made from virgin indonesian wood.

They have released two new videos (below), a report and have even used a guerrilla marketing campaign in the centre of London to raise awareness and pile pressure on manufacturers using unsustainable packaging.

This follows the successful campaign against Nestle brand KitKat over their use of palm oil, the production of which aslo threatens forests in the area.

Find out more at the Greenpeace site


Ethical Consumer Blog