> My intuition is that if I personally came up with a cute "gotcha" like this where I wound up paying zero in taxes because of some loophole, I would go to prison. Why isn't the same standard applied to rich companies?
The same standards do apply, the loopholes just don’t really exist down at a normal individual income level.
Calling it a “loophole” is a bit of a misnomer as well since it’s just the regular law. Being a subsidiary of another company is extremely common and isolating particular resources into subsidiaries with exclusive licensing/usage agreements for liability/accounting/ownership/management purposes is extremely common.
> These tax shenanigans would stop if laws were enforced.
Again, the laws are enforced. Tax avoidance schemes operate within the bounds of the law. It sounds like you’re confusing with “tax evasion”, which is illegal and is enforced.
The same standards do apply, the loopholes just don’t really exist down at a normal individual income level.
Calling it a “loophole” is a bit of a misnomer as well since it’s just the regular law. Being a subsidiary of another company is extremely common and isolating particular resources into subsidiaries with exclusive licensing/usage agreements for liability/accounting/ownership/management purposes is extremely common.
> These tax shenanigans would stop if laws were enforced.
Again, the laws are enforced. Tax avoidance schemes operate within the bounds of the law. It sounds like you’re confusing with “tax evasion”, which is illegal and is enforced.