This is the accessible text file for GAO report number GAO-04-856 
entitled 'International Taxation: Tax Haven Companies Were More Likely 
to Have a Tax Cost Advantage in Federal Contracting' which was released 
on August 27, 2004.

This text file was formatted by the U.S. Government Accountability 
Office (GAO) to be accessible to users with visual impairments, as part 
of a longer term project to improve GAO products' accessibility. Every 
attempt has been made to maintain the structural and data integrity of 
the original printed product. Accessibility features, such as text 
descriptions of tables, consecutively numbered footnotes placed at the 
end of the file, and the text of agency comment letters, are provided 
but may not exactly duplicate the presentation or format of the printed 
version. The portable document format (PDF) file is an exact electronic 
replica of the printed version. We welcome your feedback. Please E-mail 
your comments regarding the contents or accessibility features of this 
document to Webmaster@gao.gov.

This is a work of the U.S. government and is not subject to copyright 
protection in the United States. It may be reproduced and distributed 
in its entirety without further permission from GAO. Because this work 
may contain copyrighted images or other material, permission from the 
copyright holder may be necessary if you wish to reproduce this 
material separately.

Report to the Chairman, Committee on Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate: 

June 2004: 

INTERNATIONAL TAXATION: 

Tax Haven Companies Were More Likely to Have a Tax Cost Advantage in 
Federal Contracting: 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-856]: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-04-856, a report to the Chairman, Committee on 
Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The federal government was involved in about 8.6 million contract 
actions, including new contract awards, worth over $250 billion in 
fiscal year 2002. Some of these contracts were awarded to tax haven 
contractors, that is, U.S. subsidiaries of corporate parents located 
in tax haven countries. Concerns have been raised that these 
contractors may have an unfair cost advantage when competing for 
federal contracts because they are better able to lower their U.S. tax 
liability by shifting income to the tax haven parent. 

GAO’s objectives in this study were to (1) determine the conditions 
under which companies with tax haven parents have a tax cost advantage 
when competing for federal contracts and (2) estimate the number of 
companies that could have such an advantage. GAO matched federal 
contractor data with tax and location data for all large corporations, 
those with at least $10 million in assets, in 2000 and 2001, in order 
to identify those companies that could have an advantage.

What GAO Found: 

There are conditions under which a tax haven contractor may have a tax 
cost advantage (lower tax on additional income from a contract) when 
competing for a federal contract. The extent of the advantage depends 
on the relative tax liabilities of the tax haven contractor and its 
competitors. One way for a contractor to gain a tax cost advantage is 
by reducing its U.S. taxable income from other sources to less than 
zero and by using its losses to offset some or all of the additional 
income from a contract, resulting in less tax on the contract income. 
A company would thereby gain an advantage relative to those competitors 
with positive income from other sources and may be able to offer a 
lower price or cost for the contract. While some domestic corporations 
may also have a tax cost advantage, tax haven contractors may be better 
able to reduce U.S. taxable income to less than zero because of 
opportunities to shift income to their tax haven parents. Whether a 
contractor has a tax cost advantage in competing for a particular 
contract depends on the tax liabilities of other competitors. Also, 
the contractors with a tax cost advantage are not necessarily the 
successful competitors because the tax cost savings may not be 
reflected in actual prices, and prices may be only one of several 
factors involved in awarding contracts.

Using tax liability as an indicator of ability to offset contract 
income, GAO found that large tax haven contractors in both 2000 and 
2001 were more likely to have a tax cost advantage than large domestic 
contractors. In 2000, 56 percent of the 39 large tax haven contractors 
reported no tax liability, while 34 percent of the 3,253 large domestic 
contractors reported no tax liability. In 2001, 66 percent of large tax 
haven contractors and 46 percent of large domestic contractors reported 
no tax liability.

Tax Status of Large Tax Haven and Domestic Contractors in 2000 and 
2001: 

[See PDF for image]

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

[End of table]

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-856. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact James White at (202) 
512-9110 or whitej@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Scope and Methodology: 

There Are Conditions under Which Tax Haven Contractors May Have a Tax 
Cost Advantage: 

Tax Haven Contractors Were More Likely to Have a Tax Cost Advantage 
Than Domestic Contractors: 

Concluding Observations: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: A Simple Qualitative Model for Assessing Potential 
Contracting Advantages: 

Appendix II: Additional Information about Contractors in 2000: 

Information on Large Contractors in 2000: 

Appendix III: Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Tax Liabilities and Interest Expenses of Large Contractors and 
Noncontractors in 2001: 

Table 2: Tax Status of Large Tax Haven and Domestic Contractors in 2000 
and 2001: 

Table 3: Tax Cost Advantage of Corporations with Headquarters in a Tax 
Haven Country: 

Table 4: Tax Liabilities and Interest Expenses of Large Contractors and 
Noncontractors in 2000: 

Letter June 30, 2004: 

The Honorable Susan M. Collins: 
Chairman: 
Committee on Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Chairman Collins: 

The federal government was involved in about 8.6 million contract 
actions, including new contract awards, worth over $250 billion in 
fiscal year 2002. Some of the companies that were awarded these 
contracts were U.S. subsidiaries of corporate parents located in tax 
haven countries.[Footnote 1] In this report, we will refer to such 
contractors as "tax haven contractors." We reported in October 2002 
that four of the top 100 federal contractors that were publicly traded 
corporations in fiscal year 2001 were tax haven contractors and that 
three of these were originally U.S.-headquartered corporations that had 
reincorporated in tax haven countries through corporate 
inversions.[Footnote 2]

Because tax haven contractors may have opportunities to shift income 
between the U.S. subsidiary and the corporate parent in ways that 
reduce U.S. tax, you have raised concerns that tax haven contractors 
may have an unfair cost advantage over U.S.-headquartered contractors 
when competing for federal contracts. Because of the concerns, you 
asked us to determine the extent, if any, to which tax haven 
contractors have an advantage when competing for federal contracts.

After reviewing the relevant literature, determining what data were 
available, and meeting with your staff, we decided to (1) determine the 
conditions under which corporations with parents in tax havens have a 
tax cost advantage when competing for federal contracts and (2) to the 
extent possible, estimate the number of companies that have 
characteristics consistent with having such an advantage. We did not 
try to determine the size of any tax cost advantage or whether the tax 
cost advantage had an effect on the competition for specific contracts.

To address our objectives, we collected and analyzed information on 
government contracting practices and business decision-making 
processes. Using this information, we built a simple qualitative model 
to explain the conditions under which a corporation may gain a tax cost 
advantage in competing for federal contracts over other competitors 
whose headquarters are not located in tax haven countries. We matched 
contractor data from the General Services Administration's (GSA) 
Federal Procurement Data System (FPDS) to tax and location data of 
corporations from the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) Statistics of 
Income (SOI) division to estimate the number of companies with 
characteristics that the qualitative model identifies as consistent 
with a tax advantage. For our analysis of contractors in 2000, we 
selected the 3,924 corporations that appeared in both FPDS and SOI in 
that year that had total assets of at least $10 million. For our 2001 
analysis, we selected the 4,264 corporations in both databases that had 
total assets of at least $10 million. In this report, we refer to 
corporations with at least $10 million in assets as large 
corporations.[Footnote 3] The SOI sample includes the universe of such 
large corporations in 2000 and 2001. Because it is the universe, there 
is no sampling error for the information that we report about these 
corporations.

Some companies may have reasons to locate in tax haven countries that 
are unrelated to tax advantages. For example, some companies may locate 
their operations in tax haven countries because of business conditions 
in the tax haven related to costs and profitability. Location in a tax 
haven country does not by itself establish that a company has adopted a 
tax-minimizing strategy.

We requested comments on this draft from the Commissioner of Internal 
Revenue and the Secretary of the Treasury. We conducted our review from 
July 2003 through June 2004 in accordance with generally accepted 
government auditing standards.

Results in Brief: 

There are conditions under which contractors, including tax haven 
contractors, may have a tax cost advantage when competing for 
contracts, including federal government contracts. The extent of the 
tax cost advantage depends on the relative tax liabilities of a 
contractor and its competitors. The tax cost of the contract is the tax 
liability on the additional income derived from the contract. One way 
for a contractor to gain a tax advantage is by reducing its U.S. 
taxable income from other sources to less than zero and by using its 
losses to offset some or all of the additional income from a contract, 
resulting in less tax on this income. A company would thereby gain an 
advantage relative to companies with positive income from other sources 
and may be able to offer a lower price or cost for the contract. While 
some domestic corporations may also have a tax cost advantage, tax 
haven contractors may be more likely to have such an advantage because 
of opportunities to shift income to their tax haven parents. Whether a 
contractor has a tax cost advantage in competing for a particular 
contract depends on the tax liabilities of other competitors. Also, the 
contractors with a tax cost advantage are not necessarily the 
successful competitors because the tax cost savings may not be 
reflected in actual prices, and prices may be only one of several 
factors involved in awarding contracts.

Using tax liability as an indicator of ability to offset income from 
the contract, we determined that in both 2000 and 2001, large tax haven 
contractors were more likely to have a tax cost advantage than large 
domestic contractors. In 2000, 56 percent of the 39 tax haven 
contractors reported no tax liability, while 34 percent of the 3,253 
domestic contractors reported no tax liability. In 2001, 66 percent of 
tax haven contractors and 46 percent of domestic contractors reported 
no tax liability. While in 2000 and 2001 tax haven contractors were 
more likely to have zero tax liability, companies may have low or zero 
tax liabilities for a variety of reasons, such as overall business 
conditions, industry or company-specific performance issues, or the use 
of income shifting.

Background: 

Corporations can be located in tax haven countries through a variety of 
means, including corporate inversions, acquisition, or initial 
incorporation abroad. Location in a tax haven country can change a 
company's tax liability because the United States taxes domestic 
corporations differently than it taxes foreign corporations.

U.S. Tax Treatment of a Domestic Corporation: 

The United States taxes the worldwide income of domestic corporations, 
regardless of where the income is earned; gives credits for foreign 
income taxes paid; and defers taxation of foreign subsidiaries until 
their profits are repatriated in the form of dividends or other income. 
However, a U.S. parent corporation is subject to current U.S. tax on 
certain income earned by a foreign subsidiary, without regard to 
whether such income is distributed to the U.S. corporation.

Through "deferral," U.S. parent corporations are allowed to postpone 
current taxation on the net income or economic gain accrued by their 
subsidiaries. These subsidiaries are separately incorporated foreign 
subsidiaries of U.S. corporations. Because they are not considered U.S. 
residents, their profits are not taxable as long as the earnings are 
retained and reinvested outside the United States in active lines of 
business. That is, U.S. tax on such income is generally deferred until 
the income is repatriated to the U.S. parent.

The U.S. system also contains certain anti-deferral features that tax 
on a current basis certain categories of passive income earned by a 
domestic corporation's foreign subsidiaries, regardless of whether the 
income has been distributed as a dividend to the domestic parent 
corporation. Passive income includes royalties, interest and dividends. 
According to the Internal Revenue Code (I.R.C.), passive income is 
"deemed distributed" to the U.S. parent corporation and thus denied 
deferral. The rules defining the application and limits of this 
antideferral regime are known as the Subpart F rules.

In order to avoid double taxation of income, the United States permits 
a taxpayer to offset, in whole or in part, the U.S. tax owed on this 
foreign-source income. Foreign tax credits are applied against a 
corporation's U.S. tax liability. The availability of foreign tax 
credits is limited to the U.S. tax imposed on foreign-source income. To 
ensure that the credit does not reduce tax on domestic income, the 
credit cannot exceed the tax liability that would have been due had the 
income been generated domestically. Firms with credits above that 
amount in a given year have "excess" foreign tax credits, which can be 
applied against their foreign source income for the previous 2 years or 
the subsequent 5 years.

This system of taxation of U.S. multinational corporations has been the 
subject of ongoing debate. Specific issues in international taxation 
include whether to reform the U.S. system by moving from worldwide 
taxation to a territorial system that exempts foreign-source income 
from U.S. tax. These issues have become more prominent with the 
increasing openness of the U.S. economy to trade and investment.

U.S. Tax Treatment of a Foreign Corporation: 

The United States taxes foreign corporations on income generated from 
their active business operations in the United States. Such income may 
be generated by a subsidiary operating in the United States or by a 
branch of the foreign parent corporation. It is generally taxed in the 
same manner and at the same rates as the income of a U.S. corporation. 
In addition, if a foreign corporation is engaged in a trade or business 
in the United States and receives investment income from U.S. sources, 
it will generally be subject to a withholding tax of 30 percent on 
interest, dividends, royalties, and certain types of income derived 
from U.S. sources, subject to certain exceptions. This tax may be 
reduced or eliminated under an applicable tax treaty.

Scope and Methodology: 

For objective 1, we collected and analyzed information on government 
contracting practices and business decision-making processes. We also 
reviewed the economics literature and reports of the Department of the 
Treasury and the Joint Committee on Taxation to determine how 
differences in the tax treatment of corporations can contribute to a 
tax cost advantage. Using the information we obtained, we built a 
simple qualitative model to explain the conditions under which a tax 
haven company may have a tax cost advantage in competing for federal 
contracts relative to other companies whose headquarters are not 
located in tax haven countries. For a description of the model, see 
appendix I.

For objective 2, we used the qualitative model to identify companies 
that had characteristics consistent with having a tax cost advantage. 
We matched contractor data (name and taxpayer identification numbers) 
from the GSA's FPDS for 2000 and 2001 to tax and location data from the 
IRS's SOI corporation file. In this matched database, we analyzed 
information about large corporations, those with at least $10 million 
in assets.[Footnote 4] We identified the large corporations with 
characteristics consistent with a tax cost advantage compared to other 
large corporations and counted the number of these advantaged and 
disadvantaged corporations. We divided the SOI data into categories 
that differentiated between federal contractors (domestically owned and 
foreign owned) and noncontractors (domestically owned and foreign 
owned). We further divided the foreign-owned corporation data by those 
headquartered in tax haven countries from those not headquartered in 
tax haven countries.[Footnote 5]

Data Limitations and Reliability: 

SOI is a data set widely used for research purposes. SOI corporation 
files are representative samples of the population of all corporations 
that filed tax returns. Generally, SOI data can be used to project tax 
return information to the universe of all filers. However, the total 
corporations that matched in both the SOI and FPDS databases could not 
be used to project the results of our analysis to the universe of all 
corporations. Because SOI's sampling rate for smaller corporations is 
very low, our matched database contained very few smaller corporations 
and would not lead to reliable estimates of the properties of the 
universe of smaller corporations. Therefore, the results of our 
analysis cannot be projected to the universe of all corporate filers. 
However, our results do represent the universe of large tax haven 
contractors. SOI samples corporations with at least $10 million in 
assets at a 100 percent rate so that the SOI sample includes the 
universe of these larger corporations. For this reason, we report the 
results of our analysis without sampling error.

IRS performs a number of quality control steps to verify the internal 
consistency of SOI sample data. For example, it performs computerized 
tests to verify the relationships between values on the returns 
selected as part of the SOI sample and manually edits data items to 
correct for problems, such as missing items. We conducted several 
reliability tests to ensure that the data excerpts we used for this 
report were complete and accurate. For example, we electronically 
tested the data and used published data as a comparison to ensure that 
the data set was complete. To ensure accuracy, we reviewed related 
documentation and electronically tested for obvious errors. We 
concluded that the data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of 
this report.

We have previously reported that there are limitations to the accuracy 
of the data in FPDS.[Footnote 6] The data accuracy issues we reported 
on involved contract amounts and classification of contract 
characteristics. For this report, the only FPDS data we used were the 
contractors' names and taxpayer identification numbers. Our previous 
report did not address the accuracy of these data elements. Therefore, 
our match of the FPDS and SOI data may contain some nonsampling error; 
that is, due to inaccurate identification numbers, we may fail, in some 
cases, to correctly identify large corporations in SOI that were also 
federal contractors. However, we expect this nonsampling error to be 
small, and we concluded that the data were sufficiently reliable for 
the purposes of this report.

There Are Conditions under Which Tax Haven Contractors May Have a Tax 
Cost Advantage: 

Contractors, including tax haven contractors, that have a lower 
marginal tax rate on the income from a contract than other contractors 
would have a tax cost advantage when competing for a contract. 
Furthermore, there is some evidence that a tax haven contractor may be 
able to shift income between the U.S. subsidiary and its tax haven 
parent in order to reduce U.S. taxable income.

Contractors with Lower Marginal Tax Rates May Have a Tax Cost 
Advantage: 

There are conditions under which a contractor could have a tax cost 
advantage when competing for a contract. The tax cost of the contract 
is the tax paid on the additional income derived from the contract. A 
contractor that pays less tax on additional income from a contract 
gains a tax cost advantage compared to companies that pay higher tax. 
One way to gain a tax cost advantage is by offsetting income earned on 
the contract with losses from other activities. The contractors with a 
tax cost advantage are not necessarily the successful competitors 
because the tax cost savings may not be reflected in actual bid prices 
or price proposals, and prices or costs are only one of several factors 
involved in awarding contracts. This reasoning holds for all 
contractors, including tax haven contractors, and all contracts, 
including federal contracts.

The appropriate measure of the tax cost of the contract is the 
corporation's marginal tax rate. The marginal tax rate is the rate that 
applies to an increment of income. As such, the marginal tax rate would 
be the rate that applies to the additional income that would arise from 
the federal contract. For example, if a contractor in a 34 percent tax 
bracket earns $1 million of additional income from the contract, it 
would owe $340,000 in additional tax. The 34 percent statutory tax rate 
is this contractor's marginal rate.

A lower marginal tax rate may confer a tax cost advantage when 
companies are bidding on contracts because it indicates a higher after-
tax rate of return on the contact. All other things being equal, a 
lower marginal effective tax rate is equivalent to a reduction in cost, 
that is, a reduction in either the tax rate or cost would produce a 
higher after-tax return. For example, a contractor with a 30 percent 
marginal tax rate on a contract producing $1 million of income pays 
$300,000 in taxes and receives $700,000 in additional after-tax income. 
On the other hand, a contractor with a 34 percent marginal tax rate on 
the same contract producing $1 million of income pays $340,000 in taxes 
and receives $660,000 in additional after-tax income. The $40,000 
difference in after-tax income due to the difference in marginal tax 
rates is the tax cost advantage. In this example, the contractor with 
the tax cost advantage can, in theory, underbid the competitor by as 
much as $40,000 and earn an after-tax income at least as large as the 
competitor. In this sense, the competitor with the lower marginal tax 
rate would have a tax cost advantage over a competitor with a higher 
marginal tax rate.

A contractor gains a tax cost advantage if it has a lower marginal tax 
rate compared to other companies that are competing for the contract. 
However, the available data are not sufficient to measure marginal 
rates accurately. In order to compute marginal rates, detailed 
information is required about the tax status of the contractors and 
types of spending by the contractors associated with the contracts.

Although the marginal tax rates are not available, conditions under 
which the marginal rates may be lower for some companies than others 
can be inferred from their current taxable income. Specifically, a 
company that has positive taxable income may be more likely to have a 
positive tax liability on the incremental income from the contract than 
companies with zero or negative taxable income. Therefore, a company 
with zero taxable income may have a lower marginal tax rate relative to 
companies with positive taxable income.[Footnote 7] Tax losses in the 
United States on other activities could absorb incremental income 
generated from a contract. All other things being equal, a company 
competing for a federal contract that reported taxable income in the 
United States would face a higher tax cost than a competitor without 
taxable income.

While a zero tax liability provides an indicator of a tax cost 
advantage, it does not necessarily mean that the advantage exists. 
Whether a contractor with zero tax liability has a tax cost advantage 
when competing for a particular contract depends on the tax liabilities 
of the other competitors. The contractor with zero tax liability would 
have no tax cost advantage if all the other competitors also had no tax 
liability.

Even if a contractor can be shown to have a tax cost advantage when 
competing for a federal contract, this advantage does not imply that 
the contractor's bid or proposal will be successful. A tax cost 
advantage may not be reflected in the contractor's bid or price 
proposal, the content of which depends on the business judgment of the 
contractor. For example, in order to include more profit, a contractor 
may decide not to use any tax cost advantage to reduce its price. Even 
if the tax advantage is reflected in the bid or price proposal, other 
price or cost factors that affect whether the bid or proposal is 
successful may not be equal across the companies competing for the 
contract. For example, a bidder may have a tax cost advantage over 
other bidders, but if its costs of labor and material are higher, its 
tax cost advantage may be offset by its higher costs for those other 
elements of its bid. Further, where price or cost is not the only 
evaluation factor for award of the contract, any tax cost advantage may 
be offset by the relative importance of other factors such as technical 
merit, management approach, and past performance. Generally, the 
contractor's tax cost advantage would become a competitive advantage 
where other contractors would have to reduce their prices (or costs) 
and/or improve the nonprice (or noncost) elements of their proposals to 
offset the tax cost advantage.

Tax Haven Contractors May Be Able to Shift Income to Reduce U.S. 
Taxable Income: 

Tax haven contractors may be more likely to have lower tax costs than 
other contractors because they may be able to shift U.S. source income 
to their tax haven parents, reducing U.S. taxable income. Some, but not 
all, domestic contractors - those that have overseas affiliates - may 
also be able to shift income. Any income earned by the U.S. subsidiary 
from a contract for services performed in the United States would be 
U.S. taxable income. Such income would be taxed in the United States 
unless it is shifted outside the United States through such techniques 
as transfer pricing abuse.

Location in a tax haven country can confer tax advantages that are not 
related to income shifting and do not give a company an advantage when 
competing for federal contracts. When a parent locates in a tax haven 
country, taxes on foreign income can be reduced by eliminating U.S. 
corporate-level taxation of foreign operations. However, these tax 
savings are unrelated to the taxes paid on income derived from the 
contract for services performed in the United States and have no effect 
on the tax cost of the contract.[Footnote 8] The tax haven contractor 
potentially gains an advantage with respect to contract competition 
because of the increased scope for income shifting to reduce U.S. 
taxable income below zero.

A tax haven contractor may be able to shift income outside of the 
United States by increasing payments to foreign members of the 
corporate group. The contractor may engage in transfer pricing abuse, 
whereby related parties price their transactions artificially high or 
low to shift taxable income out of the United States. For example, the 
tax haven parent can charge excessive prices for goods and services 
rendered (for example, $1000 instead of $500). This raises the 
subsidiary's expenses (by $500), lowers its profits (by $500), and 
shifts the income ($500) to the lower tax jurisdiction outside the 
United States. Transfer pricing abuse can also occur when the foreign 
parent charges excessive interest on loans to its U.S. subsidiary. 
[Footnote 9] Interest deductions can also be used to shift income 
outside the United States through a technique called "earnings 
stripping." Using this technique, the foreign parent loads the U.S. 
subsidiary with a disproportionate amount of debt, merely by issuing an 
intercompany note, thereby generating interest payments to the parent 
and interest deductions against U.S. income for the subsidiary. 
However, the U.S. subsidiaries would still be subject to the I.R.C. 
rules that limit the deductibility of interest to 50 percent of 
adjusted taxable income whenever the U.S. subsidiary's debt-equity 
ratio exceeds 1.5 to 1.

Determining whether companies shift income to obtain a tax cost 
advantage is difficult because differences among companies that may 
indicate shifting can also be explained by other factors affecting 
costs and profitability. For example, while differences in average tax 
rates and interest expenses may be consistent with income shifting, 
they do not prove that such activities are occurring. The differences 
might be explained by other factors, such as the age of the company.

As table 1 shows, tax haven contractors in 2001 had greater interest 
expense and lower tax liabilities relative to gross receipts than 
domestic or all foreign contractors. The greater interest expense 
associated with lower tax liabilities may indicate that the tax haven 
contractors have used techniques like earnings stripping to shift 
taxable income outside the United States. The pattern of tax 
liabilities and interest expense in 2000 is the same as in 2001 in all 
respects except one: the ratio of interest expense to gross receipts 
for tax haven noncontractors is lower than the ratio for domestic or 
all foreign contractors in 2000. (For details, see app. II.): 

Table 1: Tax Liabilities and Interest Expenses of Large Contractors and 
Noncontractors in 2001: 

All foreign; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 740; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 0.89%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 6.55%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 7,093; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.01%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
8.53%.

Tax haven; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 50; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 0.75%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 8.33%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 787; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 0.91%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
16.32%.

Domestic; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 3,524; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.18%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 7.12%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 33,293; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.76%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
12.90%.

Total; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 4,264; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.14%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 7.04%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 40,386; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.59%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
11.92%. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

Notes: Large contractors and noncontractors are companies with total 
assets greater than or equal to $10 million. The number of companies 
does not sum to the total because tax haven contractors are included 
among all foreign contractors.

[End of table]

This pattern of interest expenses and tax liabilities is largely 
consistent with tax haven contractors inflating interest costs to shift 
taxable income outside of the United States but does not prove that 
this has occurred. The differences may be due to such factors as the 
age and industry of the companies, their history of mergers or 
acquisitions, and other details of their financial structure and the 
markets for their products. Furthermore, low or zero tax liability is 
not necessarily an indicator of noncompliance. Companies may have low 
or zero tax liabilities for a variety of reasons, such as overall 
business conditions, industry-or company-specific performance issues, 
and the use of income shifting.

The evidence on the extent to which income shifting is occurring is not 
precise. Studies that compare profitability of foreign-controlled and 
domestically controlled companies show that much of the difference can 
be explained by factors other than income shifting.[Footnote 10] 
However, the range of estimates can be wide, contributing to 
uncertainty about the precise effect, and the studies do not focus on 
income shifting to parents in tax haven countries. The 1997 study by 
Harry Grubert showed that more than 50 percent, and perhaps as much as 
75 percent, of the income differences could be explained by factors 
other than income shifting. A Treasury report on corporate inversions 
did discuss income shifting to parents in tax haven countries but did 
not provide any quantitative estimates of the extent of such shifting. 
According to the report, the tax savings from income shifting are 
greatest in the case of a foreign parent corporation located in a no-
tax jurisdiction.[Footnote 11] The Treasury report cites increased 
benefits from income shifting among other tax benefits as a reason for 
recent corporate inversion activity and increased foreign acquisitions 
of U.S. multinationals.

Tax Haven Contractors Were More Likely to Have a Tax Cost Advantage 
Than Domestic Contractors: 

Using tax liability as an indicator of ability to offset contract 
income, we determined that large tax haven contractors were more likely 
to have a tax cost advantage than large domestic contractors in both 
2000 and 2001. In both years, tax haven contractors were about one and 
a half times more likely to have no tax liability as domestic 
contractors.[Footnote 12] As table 2 shows, in 2000, 56 percent of the 
39 tax haven contractors reported no tax liability, while 34 percent of 
the 3,253 domestic contractors reported no tax liability. In 2001, 66 
percent of the 50 tax haven contractors and 46 percent of the 3,524 
domestic contractors reported no tax liability.

Table 2: Tax Status of Large Tax Haven and Domestic Contractors in 2000 
and 2001: 

2000: 

U.S. federal contractors: Tax haven; 
Contractors with tax liability: Number of companies: 17; 
Contractors with tax liability: Percentage of companies: 44%; 
Contractors without tax liability: Number of companies: 22; 
Contractors without tax liability: Percentage of companies: 56%.

U.S. federal contractors: Domestic; 
Contractors with tax liability: Number of companies: 2,132; 
Contractors with tax liability: Percentage of companies: 66%; 
Contractors without tax liability: Number of companies: 1,121; 
Contractors without tax liability: Percentage of companies: 34%.

2001: 

U.S. federal contractors: Tax haven; 
Contractors with tax liability: Number of companies: 17; 
Contractors with tax liability: Percentage of companies: 34%; 
Contractors without tax liability: Number of companies: 33; 
Contractors without tax liability: Percentage of companies: 66%.

U.S. federal contractors: Domestic; 
Contractors with tax liability: Number of companies: 1,888; 
Contractors with tax liability: Percentage of companies: 54%; 
Contractors without tax liability: Number of companies: 1,636; 
Contractors without tax liability: Percentage of companies: 46%. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

[End of table]

Under the conditions of our model, contractors with no tax liability 
would have a tax cost advantage compared to the contractors that did 
have tax liabilities in these years. Consequently, in 2000, the tax 
haven contractors without tax liabilities were likely to have a tax 
cost advantage compared to the 17 other tax haven contractors and 2,132 
domestic contractors that had tax liabilities. The 1,121 domestic 
contractors without tax liabilities were also likely to have a tax cost 
advantage compared to these same companies. In 2001, the tax haven 
contractors with zero tax liability were likely to have a tax cost 
advantage compared to the 17 other tax haven contractors and 1,888 
domestic contractors that had tax liabilities. Because they reported no 
tax liability, 1,636 domestic contractors were also likely to have a 
tax cost advantage with compared to these same companies.

This analysis of possible tax advantages does not show that income 
shifting is the only potential cause of the advantage. As mentioned 
above, the tax losses that confer the advantage may be due to income 
shifting, but may also be due to other factors such as overall business 
conditions, industry and age of the company, or company-specific 
performance issues.[Footnote 13] In addition, the analysis does not 
show the size of the advantage in terms of tax dollars saved. The 
amount saved depends, in part, on the amount of additional income from 
the contract. If the contractor with no tax liability has insufficient 
losses to offset the additional income, it would pay taxes on at least 
part of the income, reducing the potential advantage. Lastly, the 
analysis identifies tax haven contractors that meet the conditions for 
having a tax cost advantage with respect to income from the contract in 
2000 and 2001. The data do not indicate whether they have an overall 
tax cost advantage on a contract that produces income in other years. 
Furthermore, to the extent that losses are used to offset income in the 
current year, they cannot be used to offset income in other years. 
These smaller loss carryovers would reduce the overall tax cost 
advantage.

Concluding Observations: 

The existence of a tax cost advantage for some tax haven contractors 
matters to American taxpayers. First, the advantage could, but does not 
necessarily, affect which company wins a contract. A contractor with a 
tax cost advantage could offer a price that wins a contract based more 
on tax considerations than on factors such as the quality and cost of 
producing goods and services. Second, the potential tax cost advantage 
may contribute, along with other tax considerations, to the incentives 
for companies to move to tax haven countries, reducing the U.S. 
corporate tax base.

The issue of tax cost advantages for tax haven contractors is related 
to the larger issue of how companies headquartered or operating in the 
United States should be taxed. For example, the questions about how the 
worldwide income of U.S. multinational corporations should be taxed are 
part of a larger debate and beyond the scope of this report. Because of 
these larger policy issues, we are not making recommendations in this 
report.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

In a letter dated June 22, 2004, the IRS Commissioner stated that 
because IRS's only role in our report was to provide us with certain 
tax data, IRS's review of a draft of this report would be limited to 
evaluating how well we described the tax data it provided. The 
Commissioner stated that IRS believes that the report fairly describes 
these data. On June 28, officials from the Department of the Treasury's 
Office of Tax Policy provided oral comments on several technical 
issues, which we incorporated into the report where appropriate.

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days 
after its date. At that time, we will send copies to the Secretary of 
the Treasury, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and other interested 
parties. We will also make copies available to others on request. In 
addition, this report will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site 
at [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov].

If you have any questions concerning this report, please contact me at 
(202) 512-9110 or [Hyperlink, whitej@gao.gov] or Kevin Daly at (202) 
512-9040 or [Hyperlink, dalyke@gao.gov]. Key contributors to this 
report are listed in appendix III.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

James R. White: 
Director, Tax Issues: 

[End of section]

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: A Simple Qualitative Model for Assessing Potential 
Contracting Advantages: 

A parent corporation that locates in a tax haven country may reduce 
U.S. tax on corporate income by shielding subsidiaries from U.S. 
taxation and by providing opportunities for shifting of U.S. source 
income to lower tax jurisdictions. Such a corporation could have an 
advantage because it is able to have a lower marginal tax rate on U.S. 
contract income than its domestic competitors or other foreign 
competitors. The simple qualitative model in this appendix specifies a 
set of conditions under which corporations with a tax haven parent may 
have a lower marginal U.S. tax rate.

The principal means by which a parent corporation that locates in a tax 
haven country may have lower U.S. tax liabilities are as follows.

* The corporation pays no U.S. tax on what would have been its foreign 
source income if it were located in the United States. To the extent 
that foreign subsidiaries are owned by a foreign parent, the U.S. 
corporate-level taxation of foreign operations is eliminated. Tax 
savings would come from not having to pay tax on the corporate group's 
foreign income.

* The corporation may be able to shift income outside of the United 
States by increasing payments to foreign members of the group. The 
corporation may engage in transfer pricing abuse, whereby related 
parties price their transactions artificially high or low to shift 
taxable income out of the United States.[Footnote 14] Transfer pricing 
abuse can also occur when the foreign parent charges excessive interest 
on loans to its U.S. subsidiary. Interest deductions can also be used 
to shift income outside the United States through a technique called 
earnings stripping. Using this technique, the foreign parent loads the 
U.S. subsidiary with a disproportionate amount of debt, merely by 
issuing an intercompany note, thereby generating interest payments to 
the parent and interest deductions against U.S. income for the 
subsidiary. The subsidiaries would still be subject to the thin 
capitalization rules (I.R.C. section 163 (j)) that limit the 
deductibility of interest to 50 percent of adjusted taxable income 
whenever the U.S. subsidiary's debt-equity ratio exceeds 1.5 to 1.

When a parent corporation locates in a tax haven country, the 
elimination of U.S. corporate-level taxation of foreign operations can 
reduce taxes on foreign income. However, these tax savings are 
unrelated to the taxes paid on income derived from the contract and 
have no effect on the tax cost of the contract. Any income earned by 
the U.S. subsidiary from a contract for services performed in the U.S. 
would be U.S. taxable income. Therefore, the elimination of the 
corporate-level taxation of foreign operations provides no competitive 
advantage to a corporation that is competing for a U.S. government 
contract.

A corporation has a U.S. tax advantage in competing for a government 
contract when it would pay a lower marginal U.S. tax rate on the income 
from that contract than would the other companies competing for that 
same contract. The available data are not sufficient to measure 
marginal rates accurately. However, the likelihood that the rates are 
lower for some companies than others can be inferred from their current 
tax liabilities. The manipulation of interest payments and other 
transfer pricing can reduce U.S. taxable income. We can infer that the 
corporation may have a lower marginal tax rate on its U.S. contract 
income if the manipulation allows a corporation that would otherwise 
have positive taxable income to reduce its taxable income (excluding 
the net income from the contract) to a negative amount. Table 3 shows a 
set of situations, or cases, in which a corporation may and may not 
have a cost advantage when bidding on a contract.

Table 3: Tax Cost Advantage of Corporations with Headquarters in a Tax 
Haven Country: 

Case: 1; 
U.S. income of a company in the United States: +; 
U.S. income of a company with its parent located in a tax haven 
country: -; 
Company has a tax cost advantage with parent in tax haven country: Yes.

Case: 2; 
U.S. income of a company in the United States: +; 
U.S. income of a company with its parent located in a tax haven 
country: +; 
Company has a tax cost advantage with parent in tax haven country: No.

Case: 3; 
U.S. income of a company in the United States: -; 
U.S. income of a company with its parent located in a tax haven 
country: -; 
Company has a tax cost advantage with parent in tax haven country: No. 

Source: GAO qualitative model of tax cost advantage.

[End of table]

In order to use this model to identify corporations with a tax cost 
advantage, we make two assumptions: (1) corporations with positive U.S. 
taxable income pay tax at the same rate based on the schedule of 
corporate tax rates (that is, their income before the contract income 
puts them in the same tax bracket) and (2) corporations with negative 
income have sufficient losses to offset income from the contract. With 
these assumptions, we can draw inferences about relative marginal tax 
rates for the three cases. A U.S. corporation that has positive U.S. 
taxable income (before taking the income from the contract into 
account) and has a parent located in a tax haven country does not have 
a competitive advantage compared to a U.S. corporation with positive 
income (Case 2). Because they have positive income and pay the same 
rate of tax, neither has a lower marginal tax rate than the other. 
Likewise, a corporation with a tax haven parent that has U.S. tax 
losses and zero tax liability would not have an advantage compared to 
another corporation with tax losses (Case 3). Because the marginal tax 
rate is zero for both these corporations and they have sufficient 
losses to offset the contract income, neither has a tax cost advantage.

However, a corporation that has a tax haven parent and U.S. tax losses 
would have an advantage when compared to a corporation with positive 
income (Case 1). In this case, the corporation with losses has a zero 
marginal rate, which provides a tax cost advantage compared to a 
corporation with taxable income and a positive marginal rate. The 
assumption that a corporation with zero tax liability has sufficient 
losses to offset contract income may not be true in particular 
instances. For example, a corporation may obtain more than one contract 
(in the public or private sector) and the marginal tax rate on income 
from a particular contract will depend on how the losses are allocated 
across income from all the contracts. However, a corporation with zero 
tax liability is more likely to be able to offset the additional income 
than a corporation with positive tax liability. In this sense, tax 
liability is an indicator of the ability to offset income from the 
contract.

The qualitative model does not identify the causes of the advantage. 
The tax losses that confer the advantage may be due to income shifting, 
but may also be due to other factors. In addition, the model does not 
show the size of the advantage in terms of tax dollars saved. The 
amount saved depends, in part, on the amount of additional income from 
the contract. If the contractor with no tax liability has insufficient 
losses to offset the additional income, it would pay taxes on at least 
part of the income, reducing the potential advantage compared to 
contractors that have positive tax liabilities. Lastly, the model is 
used to identify tax haven contractors that meet the conditions for 
having a competitive advantage with respect to income from the contract 
in 2000 and 2001. The data do not indicate whether they have an overall 
tax advantage on a contract that produces income in other years.

[End of section]

Appendix II: Additional Information about Contractors in 2000: 

The additional table of tax liabilities and interest expense for 2000 
is provided for comparison with the data reported in the letter. It 
shows substantially the same pattern.

Information on Large Contractors in 2000: 

Table 4 shows that in 2000, tax haven contractors had greater interest 
expense and lower tax liabilities relative to gross receipts than 
domestic or all foreign contractors. The pattern of tax liabilities and 
interest expense in 2000 is the same as in 2001 in all respects except 
one: the ratio of interest expense to gross receipts for tax haven 
noncontractors is lower than the ratio for domestic or all foreign 
contractors in 2000. The greater interest expense associated with lower 
tax liabilities may indicate, but does not prove, that the tax haven 
contractors have used techniques like earnings stripping to shift 
taxable income outside the United States.

Table 4: Tax Liabilities and Interest Expenses of Large Contractors and 
Noncontractors in 2000: 

All foreign; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 671; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.25%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 5.01%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 7,173; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.27%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
11.62%. 

Tax haven;% 
Contractors: Number of companies: 39; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 0.31%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 9.92%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 787; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.10%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
6.32%. 

Domestic; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 3,253; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.55%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 7.13%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 35,433; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.90%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
13.01%. 

Total; 
Contractors: Number of companies: 3,924; 
Contractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.50%; 
Contractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 6.81%; 
Noncontractors: Number of companies: 42,606; 
Noncontractors: Tax liability as a percentage of gross receipts: 1.76%; 
Noncontractors: Interest expense as a percentage of gross receipts: 
12.71%. 

Source: GAO analysis of IRS data.

Notes: Large contractors and noncontractors are those with total assets 
greater than or equal to $10 million. The number of companies does not 
sum to the total because tax haven contractors are included among all 
foreign contractors.

[End of table] 

[End of section]

Appendix III: Staff Acknowledgments: 

Amy Friedheim, Donald Marples, Samuel Scrutchins, James Ungvarsky, and 
James Wozny made key contributions to this report.

(450244): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] In such cases, the U.S. subsidiary is a U.S. corporation, 
incorporated in the United States, but is owned by a parent company 
incorporated in a tax haven country. The term tax haven is used by the 
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to refer 
to a country that has no or nominal taxes on corporate income and also 
meets other criteria related to the transparency of its legal and 
accounting systems and to its openness to the exchange of tax 
information with other countries. 

[2] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Information on Federal 
Contractors That Are Incorporated Offshore, GAO-03-194R (Washington, 
D.C.: Oct. 1, 2002). An inverted company is a U.S. subsidiary of a 
foreign parent where ownership of the U.S. subsidiary had been 
transferred to the foreign parent. The term "inversion" is used to 
describe a broad category of transactions through which a U.S.-based 
multinational company restructures its corporate group so that after 
the transaction the ultimate parent of the corporate group is a foreign 
corporation. See U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax Policy, 
Corporate Inversion Transactions: Tax Policy Implications (Washington, 
D.C.: May 17, 2002).

[3] The designation large corporation, as used in this report, is not 
related to the business size standards used in determining small 
business status for federal government contracts.

[4] We did not include in our analysis corporations that were real 
estate investment trusts, regulated investment companies, or subchapter 
S corporations because these pass-through entities are treated 
differently for tax purposes than ordinary corporations.

[5] As of December 2003, OECD had identified 39 countries or 
jurisdictions that they consider to be tax havens. In this report, we 
refer to these countries and jurisdictions as tax haven countries. They 
are Andorra, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Bahrain, 
Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Cook 
Islands, Cyprus, Dominica, Gibraltar, Grenada, Guernsey, Isle of Man, 
Jersey, Liberia, The Principality of Liechtenstein, Malta, The Republic 
of the Marshall Islands, Mauritius, The Principality of Monaco, 
Montserrat, The Republic of Nauru, Netherlands Antilles, Niue, Panama, 
St. Christopher (St. Kitts) and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the 
Grenadines, Samoa, San Marino, Seychelles, Turks & Caicos, U.S. Virgin 
Islands, and Vanuatu.

[6] U.S. General Accounting Office, Reliability of Federal Procurement 
Data, GAO-04-295R (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 30, 2003).

[7] Besides depending on taxable income and potential availability of 
tax losses to offset income, the likelihood of a zero marginal rate 
also depends on the availability of accumulated tax credits, which can 
directly offset tax liabilities. We emphasize taxable income here 
because the availability of tax losses is more directly connected to 
the income shifting discussed in the next section. Our estimate of the 
number of contractors with an advantage is based on whether they have 
positive or zero tax liability, which includes the effects of both loss 
and credit carryforwards. 

[8] For a more detailed description of the potential tax advantages, 
see app. I.

[9] There are various provisions in the I.R.C. designed to limit income 
shifting. The limits include the requirement (Section 482) that 
transactions between related parties use arm's length prices, that is, 
the prices that unrelated parties would or should use for the 
transactions. 

[10] See, for example, Harry Grubert, "Another Look at the Low Taxable 
Income of Foreign-Controlled Companies in the United States," Tax Notes 
International (Arlington, Va.: Dec. 8, 1997), 1,873-97, and David S. 
Laster and Robert N. McCauley," Making Sense of the Profits of Foreign 
Firms in the United States," Federal Reserve Bank of New York Quarterly 
Review (New York: Summer-Fall 1994).

[11] U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax Policy, Corporate 
Inversion Transactions: Tax Policy Implications.

[12] The relative probability of contractors having no tax liability 
can be computed by comparing relative frequencies (percentages) of tax 
haven and domestic contractors with no tax liability. In 2000 and 2001, 
the relative frequencies were 1.65 (.56 divided by .34) and 1.43 (.66 
divided by .46), respectively. 

[13] In a prior report, we found that the ratios of tax liability and 
interest expense to gross receipts varied by industry. However, after 
controlling for the age and industry of the corporations, we found that 
U.S. subsidiaries of foreign parent corporations were more likely to 
have zero tax liability than domestic corporations from 1996 through 
2000. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Tax Administration: 
Comparison of the Reported Tax Liabilities of Foreign-and U.S.-
Controlled Corporations, 1996-2000, GAO-04-358 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 
27, 2004). 

[14] There are various provisions in the I.R.C. designed to limit 
income shifting. The limits include the requirement (Section 482) that 
transactions between related parties use arm's length prices, that is, 
the prices that unrelated parties would use for the transactions. 

GAO's Mission: 

The Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of 
Congress, exists to support Congress in meeting its constitutional 
responsibilities and to help improve the performance and accountability 
of the federal government for the American people. GAO examines the use 
of public funds; evaluates federal programs and policies; and provides 
analyses, recommendations, and other assistance to help Congress make 
informed oversight, policy, and funding decisions. GAO's commitment to 
good government is reflected in its core values of accountability, 
integrity, and reliability.

Obtaining Copies of GAO Reports and Testimony: 

The fastest and easiest way to obtain copies of GAO documents at no 
cost is through the Internet. GAO's Web site ( www.gao.gov ) contains 
abstracts and full-text files of current reports and testimony and an 
expanding archive of older products. The Web site features a search 
engine to help you locate documents using key words and phrases. You 
can print these documents in their entirety, including charts and other 
graphics.

Each day, GAO issues a list of newly released reports, testimony, and 
correspondence. GAO posts this list, known as "Today's Reports," on its 
Web site daily. The list contains links to the full-text document 
files. To have GAO e-mail this list to you every afternoon, go to 
www.gao.gov and select "Subscribe to e-mail alerts" under the "Order 
GAO Products" heading.

Order by Mail or Phone: 

The first copy of each printed report is free. Additional copies are $2 
each. A check or money order should be made out to the Superintendent 
of Documents. GAO also accepts VISA and Mastercard. Orders for 100 or 
more copies mailed to a single address are discounted 25 percent. 
Orders should be sent to: 

U.S. Government Accountability Office

441 G Street NW, Room LM

Washington, D.C. 20548: 

To order by Phone: 



Voice: (202) 512-6000: 

TDD: (202) 512-2537: 

Fax: (202) 512-6061: 

To Report Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in Federal Programs: 

Contact: 

Web site: www.gao.gov/fraudnet/fraudnet.htm

E-mail: fraudnet@gao.gov

Automated answering system: (800) 424-5454 or (202) 512-7470: 

Public Affairs: 

Jeff Nelligan, managing director,

NelliganJ@gao.gov

(202) 512-4800

U.S. Government Accountability Office,

441 G Street NW, Room 7149

Washington, D.C. 20548: