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Freeloading Bankers

How the Global Economy's Rule Makers Thrive on Subsidies
from an Impoverished and Disenfranchised City

Introduction

Most people are shocked to discover that "Taxation without Representation" -- a basic motivation for the American Revolution -- persists today in our nation's capital, Washington DC. DC has no representative, elected or otherwise, in the US Senate, and one nonvoting delegate in the US House of Representatives. The Congress, with no votes cast by the city, acts as DC's "state legislature"; Congress can, and frequently does, overrule the actions of the locally elected mayor and city council, and has even overturned citizen-passed ballot initiatives. DC residents have always fulfilled national obligations: they have paid taxes and served in wars. They are taxed without representation

Nestled in this political paradox between theory and practice are the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). Unfortunately for DC's residents, who already have little leeway for political self-determination, the World Bank and IMF's presence in DC has significant implications for DC's tax and revenue situation. Before exploring those ramifications, a little information about DC's existing tax situation is necessary.

DC's unique tax and revenue situation:

The tax base has an unusually high proportion of low-income taxpayers.

Even with this constricted tax base, DC must provide services provided by city, county, and state governments such as state courts, driver licensure, liquor control, unemployment compensation, food and drug inspection, health care, professional licensure and designation of development zones.

In DC, the individual income tax burden is substantially higher than the average of cities that levy income taxes.

Property taxes in DC are substantially lower than most cities. [1]

Since 1999, the property tax rate for Class II (commercial, industrial, vacant, or abandoned property) has decreased by 20 cents per $100 assessed value. The rate for Class I property (owner-occupied property) has remained the same. [2] ****This is despite the real estate boom of the last five years.

In DC, the regressive tax system places a heavier burden on lower-income people. Furthermore the "Tax Parity Act," which has been frozen for the last few years due to the budget deficits but can be re-instated at any time, would significantly increase the regressive nature of DC's tax structure. For instance it would lower the rate of corporate income taxes from 9.975% to 8.5%, a decrease which would mean hundreds of millions of dollars of public money lost to further strategies of Corporate Welfare. [3]

In 2004, DC will use $312,284,128 in local funds for loan repayments. Although DC's bond ratings -- a standard comparative gauge of general financial health (including indebtedness) -- have improved in the last few years, as of 2002 DC had remained one of only 5 major cities in a group of 35 with a less than "A" bond rating. [4]

Part of DC's response to its budgetary constraints has been reducing services to low-income residents, such as cuts in public education and medical funding. One case is the recent closing of DC General Hospital, a move that mirrors World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) policies imposed on Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. The World Bank and IMF, and now DC, maintain that it is generally more efficient for private entities to provide healthcare, and that they should always do so, even in the face of persistent problems with insuring the access of low-income people to private health care.

What do the World Bank and IMF do?

The World Bank and IMF are public institutions owned by the governments of the world. Their activities, ostensibly intended to promote "development", are mandated by the national governments of the wealthiest countries, which also provide much of the funding they use. Even on the basis of widely available statistics released by the two institutions themselves, it is certainly debatable whether the Bank and IMF act for the public good. Both the World Bank and the IMF operate in a highly secretive matter where substantive decisions are not open to public scrutiny -- of either citizens in the countries which make funds available, or of citizens in countries which are supposed to benefit -- until well after they have taken effect, if at all. Like the DC Control Board, they are unelected organizations that make decisions for a disenfranchised constituency. The two institutions have largely failed in their stated goals.

In most of a group of 83 poor countries that have received substantial IMF financing between 1978 and 1997, unemployment increased, real wages fell, income distribution became more unequal, poverty rose, food production per capita declined, external debt grew, and social expenditures were cut during those years. [5]

60 percent of World Bank projects have failed. Furthermore, because the projects have increased the debt burden of the countries that received loans from the Bank to carry out those projects, and, in many cases, caused environmental damage, they have been losses in economic terms. [6]

IMF and World Bank: 100% Tax Exempt!

International organizations are exempt from customs duties, any judicial process (including suits in civil and criminal court), and revenue, sales and property taxes under the International Organizations Immunities Act--title 22, section 288 of the United States Code. [7] Four members of the World Bank Group--the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD), the International Development Association (IDA), International Finance Corporation (IFC), and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)--as well as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) were designated as eligible for these benefits by executive order.

the IMF, the IDB and the World Bank do not pay any taxes on their combined yearly profits of over $4 billion, [8]

the IMF, the IDB, and the World Bank do not pay taxes on their property in DC, which has a combined value of over $1.3 billion, [9]

foreign nationals who work for the World Bank or IMF, including those resident in DC, do not pay DC (or federal) income tax (and employees who are U.S. nationals have their salaries pro-rated so they have the same take-home pay as their foreign counterparts),

the IMF and World Bank also do not pay sales taxes.

What do the IMF, IDB, and World Bank own?

Address Value Annual Unpaid Taxes (Est.)
2121 Pennsylvania Avenue NW (IFC) $ 349,709,220 $ 6,469,620.57
1818 H Street NW (IBRD) $ 308,066,310 $ 5,699,226.73
1300 New York Avenue NW (IDB) $153,159,000 >$2,833,441.50
700 19th Street NW (IMF) $ 141,586,590 $ 2,619,351.91
600 19th Street NW (IBRD) $ 128,393,540 $ 2,375,280.49
**1900 Pennsylvania Avenue NW (IMF) $120,000,000 $2,220,000**
1816 I Street NW (IBRD) $ 86,752,020 $ 1,604,912.37
701 18th Street NW (IBRD) $ 80,790,300 $ 1,494,620.55
TOTALS $1,368,456,980 $25,316,454.12

 **This site is currently under construction so we do not have an exact value. The estimate we used is lower that what it will most likely be.

What are the IMF, IDB, and World Bank Worth? (fy 2002)

Organization Net Income Annual Unpaid Taxes
I.B.R.D. $2,778,000,000 $277,105,500
I.D.B. $708,735,000 $70,696,316
I.M.F. $360,000,000 $35,910,000
I.F.C. $215,000,000 $21,446,250
M.I.G.A. $4,489,000 $447,778
TOTALS $4,066,224,000 $405,605,844

What do the IMF, IDB, and World Bank Owe?

Estimated total of annual unpaid Property Taxes: $25,316,454.12, at current class II rate of 1.85% of value.

Estimated total of annual unpaid Corporate Taxes: $405,605,844 at current rate of 9.975% of net income.

Total $430,922,298.12

What are Payments In Lieu of Taxes (PILOTs)?

Payments In Lieu Of Taxes (PILOTs) are voluntary payments made by tax-exempt organizations to the localities (cities and counties) in which they own property -- often to the general tax fund. While some organizations make payments as a response to citizen pressure -- which has been key in many cases -- or to prevent their tax-exempt status from being challenged by localities strapped for cash, most make the payments because they understand:

the importance of property taxes to local revenue, and

that their ownership of property increases the costs of local government, which must provide service to land that is not vacant, while depriving it of the revenue that would be due were the land owned instead by a tax-paying organization.

The amount of the payment is often negotiated by the organization and the locality based on four factors: the fair tax value of the land, the cost of providing services, the local government's need, and the organization's ability to pay.

Who makes PILOTs?

Since 1977 the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has administered one of the largest PILOT programs on behalf of the Department of the Interior. This program -- called PILT by the federal government -- includes payments made on tax-exempt federal land administered by the BLM, the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Forest Service. It also includes federal water projects and some semi-active and inactive military bases. In 2003 payments totaling over $218 million will be made to 1,900 local governments, and payments are increasing every year. [10]

Public corporations and large educational institutions also make PILOTs. The Massachusetts Port Authority, a tax-exempt state agency, makes large payments (totaling $10 million in 2000) to the city of Boston. [11] Similarly, the New Hampshire State Port Authority makes an annual payment to the city of Portsmouth for highway maintenance, fire protection and other services. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has been making payments to the city of Cambridge since 1928. [12] Harvard and Yale Universities also have PILOT agreements with Boston and New Haven.

Why should the IMF and World Bank make PILOTs?

There is ample precedent for tax-exempt institutions that own amounts of property large enough to substantially influence their locality's tax base making PILOTs in the interest of good citizenship. In light of DC's existing tax situation -- a heavy tax burden on low-income residents in a city so swamped with debt it is cutting services to those same citizens -- good citizenship is now more necessary than ever. It is unquestionable that the IMF, the IDB, and World Bank can pay: together they make over $4 billion in profits annually, and the IMF has approximately $30 billion in gold reserves.

The idea of PILOTs has been raised before with regards to the World Bank and IMF. In its May 1998 report, "The Tax Revision Commission recommended that the federal government make an annual payment in lieu of property taxes to the District. Other properties that the federal government has exempted, such as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the Inter-American Development Bank and other international organizations, should make in lieu payments, or the federal government should make in lieu payments on their behalf." [13]

Currently, the IMF, IDB, and World Bank drain DC's resources. With well over 10,000 employees combined, they are the third largest employer in DC. Beyond normal police, fire, snow removal, and emergency planning services, the cost of services is also increased in light of the World Bank and IMF attracting increased opposition to their policies. The debate on whether the World Bank and IMF act in the public good is already grounds to reconsider their tax exemption.

It is time for the IMF and World Bank to stop freeloading, and start contributing to their hometown, Washington DC!



[1] "Tax Rates and Tax Burdens in the District of Columbia- A Nationwide Comparison, 2001" http://www.cfo.wasingtondc.gov/services/studies/index.shtm, 5/7/03. See also "The Synergy of Struggles: DC Statehood and Human Rights" by David Schwartzman for a discussion of DC's income and tax inequalities and their implications for human rights and good governance. http://www.redandgreen.org/Information/Statehood_and_Human_Rights.htm 5/7/03

[2] Current figures, http:www.cfo.washingtondc.gov/services/tax/property/rates.shtm 5/7/03 1999 Figures, http://www.cfo.washingtondc.gov/services/tax_summary/index.shtm 5/7/03

[3] "Tax Parity Act of 1999" http://www.panix.com/~eck/taxparitychart.pdf 5/7/03

[4] "FY 2004 Proposed Operating Budget" http://www.dc.gov/mayor/budget/baseline/index2.shtm 5/7/03

For a listing of the 35 major cities' bond ratings see "The Government Performance Project" http://governing.com/gpp/2000/gp0chtbo.htm 5/7/03

[5] "Testimony by Steven Hellinger, President, The Development Gap. Presented to the Subcommitte on General Oversight and Investigations, Committee on Banking and Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives" http://www.developmentgap.org/imfsteve.html 5/7/03

[6] "Meltzer Commission on International Financial Institutions March 2000" http://csf.colorado.edu/roper/if/Meltzer-commission-mar00/ 5/7/03

[7] Office of the Law Revision Council, http://law2.house.gov 5/7/03

[8] For IBRD income see "World Bank Annual Report 2002" http://www.worldbank.org/annualreport/2002/pdf/IntReconstruction.pdf

For IFC income see "IFC Annual Report 2002" http://www.ifc.org/ar2002/pdf/V2financial.pdf

For IDB income see "IDB Annual Report 2002" http://www.iadb.org/EXR/ar99/ar2002/ar2002_eng.pdf

For MIGA income see "MIGA Annual Report 2002" http://www.miga.org/screens/pubs/annrep02/09financials.pdf 5/7/03

[10] "BLM Issues Payments In Lieu of Taxes to Local Governments" http://www.blm.gov/nhp/news/releases/pages/2003/pr030618_pilt.htm 5/21/03

[11] Boston Puts Squeeze on Nonprofit Institutions, Boston Business Journal, October 8, 1999.

[12] "MIT Gives Cambridge $813K in Lieu of Taxes" http://mit.edu/newsoffice/tt/1991/jul17/25146.html 5/21/03

[13] "Tax Revision Commission Summary Report, May 1998" http://dcwatch.com/taxrev/taxrep3.htm 5/7/03

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