Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on: (1)
California's experience in conducting formulary apportionment audits of
multinational corporations; and (2) issues that would have to be
considered before adopting a formulary system at the federal level.
GAO found that: (1) under worldwide formulary apportionment, California
first had to determine whether California corporations that were part of
a multinational enterprise were engaged in a unitary business with
affiliated U.S. and foreign corporations based on an analysis of the
enterprise's ownership and business operations; (2) auditors then used
the parent enterprise's financial records, particularly its federal tax
returns and audited financial statements, to ensure that state tax was
based on the income and the apportionment factors for all corporations
comprising the unitary business; (3) California assessed millions of
dollars of additional state taxes based on unity determinations, but
corporations contested most of the additional assessments; (4)
California adjusted for U.S. and foreign accounting standards and
recordkeeping differences that had material impacts on its audits; (5)
because taxpayers did not always supply requested information, the
auditors used estimates and assumptions in making their adjustments; (6)
matters that need to be considered before adopting formulary
apportionment at the federal level include the design and administration
of a federal unitary system, how to reconcile accounting rules
differences and obtain and verify financial information, and the
transition from a separate accounting system to a unitary system; and
(7) tax experts do not agree on whether problems associated with a
unitary system could be resolved.
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