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of Offshore Subsidiaries to Avoid Certain Payroll Taxes' which was 
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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

January 2010: 

Defense Contracting: 

Recent Law Has Impacted Contractor Use of Offshore Subsidiaries to 
Avoid Certain Payroll Taxes: 

GAO-10-327: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-10-327, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Many federal contractors establish offshore subsidiaries to take 
advantage of labor and market conditions. GAO has found that they also 
use offshore subsidiaries to reduce their U.S. tax burdens. In 2008, 
Congress passed the Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax (HEART) 
Act which resulted in contractor offshore subsidiaries paying certain 
payroll taxes for U.S. personnel working abroad. 

Fiscal year 2009’s National Defense Authorization Act required GAO to 
report on the rationales, implications, and costs and benefits of 
defense contractors’ use of offshore subsidiaries. We (1) assessed 
trends and purposes for contractors’ offshore subsidiaries; (2) 
identified how contractors use subsidiaries to support defense 
contracts; (3) assessed DOD’s oversight of contractors’ use of 
offshore subsidiaries. 

To conduct our work, we reviewed data for the 29 U.S. publicly traded 
contractors with at least $1 billion in DOD spending in fiscal year 
2008, reviewed several illustrative contracts selected based on 
categories of DOD services most often performed overseas, reviewed 
audit documents, and interviewed DOD officials about oversight. 

What GAO Found: 

Many of the top 29 U.S. publicly traded defense contractors—those with 
$1 billion or more in DOD contracts in fiscal year 2008—have created 
offshore subsidiaries to facilitate global operations. Between fiscal 
years 2003 and 2008, they increased their use of these subsidiaries by 
26 percent, maintaining at least 1,194 in 2008. We interviewed 13 of 
the 29 contractors based on a range of the amount of government work, 
locations of subsidiaries, and industry types; they reported that 97 
percent of the subsidiaries generally supported global commercial and 
foreign government clients, while the remaining 3 percent supported 
DOD contracts performed overseas. These subsidiaries also helped the 
29 contractors reduce taxes, with about one-third decreasing their 
effective U.S. corporate tax rates in 2008 in part through the use of 
foreign affiliates, lower foreign tax rates, and indefinite 
reinvestment of foreign income outside of the United States. 

For five of the DOD contracts we reviewed, companies principally used 
offshore subsidiaries to hire U.S. workers providing services overseas 
on U.S. government contracts in order to avoid Social Security, 
Medicare—known as Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA)—and other 
payroll taxes. This practice allowed contractors to offer lower bids 
when competing for certain services and thereby reduce costs for DOD. 
Our analysis of two contracts showed that the use of offshore 
subsidiaries saved DOD at least $110 million annually prior to the 
HEART Act, through payroll tax avoidance. While this practice provided 
contract cost savings for DOD, it resulted in these companies avoiding 
payroll taxes that would have contributed to the Social Security and 
Medicare Trust Funds. The 2008 HEART Act resulted in offshore 
subsidiaries of U.S. companies paying FICA taxes for U.S. workers 
performing services overseas on U.S. government contracts. As a 
result, in fiscal year 2009, four of the case study contractors using 
offshore subsidiaries to support DOD work requested reimbursement from 
DOD of at least $140 million for new FICA payments. Federal and state 
unemployment payroll taxes, however, were not covered by the HEART 
Act, and several contractors that used offshore subsidiaries have 
continued to avoid these taxes. In one state, we reviewed 
documentation for about 140 former employees of several contractors 
who were denied unemployment benefits in 2009. State workforce 
officials indicated these benefits were denied because the employees 
worked for a foreign subsidiary and not an American employer. 

DOD officials were aware of the roles offshore subsidiaries played in 
the DOD contracts we reviewed and stated that oversight mechanisms, 
such as the Defense Contract Audit Agency’s reviews of incurred costs 
and oversight documents, inform them of the activities of offshore 
subsidiaries. In contracts we reviewed, evidence of offshore 
subsidiaries was present in contractor labor rates, cost accounting 
disclosures, and contractor price proposals. Contracting officials 
stated that the use of offshore subsidiaries did not negatively impact 
contract schedule or performance. 

What GAO Recommends: 

Congress should consider whether further legislative action is needed 
to address contractor avoidance of unemployment taxes for U.S. workers. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-327] or key 
components. For more information, contact John Needham at (202) 512-
4841 or needhamjk1@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Top Defense Contractors Increased Offshore Subsidiary Use to Support 
Global Commercial Activities and Benefit from Reduced Liabilities: 

Offshore Subsidiaries Supporting DOD Service Contracts Overseas Were 
Principally Used to Avoid Payroll Taxes: 

Contractors' Use of Offshore Subsidiaries Did Not Impede DOD's 
Contract Oversight: 

Conclusion: 

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Comparison of Top 25 Defense Contractors' Subsidiaries in 
2003 and 2008: 

Table 2: Contractor and Subsidiary Information for Six Case Study 
Defense Contracts: 

Table 3: Notional Comparison of Selected Payroll Taxes Paid by 
Employer for an Employee Earning $100,000 in Wages: 

Table 4: DOD Contractors Interviewed and Their Fiscal Year 2008 DOD 
Contract Obligations: 

Figure: 

Figure 1: Example of Contractor Process for Hiring U.S. Personnel 
through Offshore Subsidiaries for DOD Work Overseas Prior to the HEART 
Act: 

Abbreviations: 

CAS: Cost Accounting Standards: 

DCAA: Defense Contract Audit Agency: 

DCMA: Defense Contract Management Agency: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

FAR: Federal Acquisition Regulations: 

FICA: Federal Insurance Contributions Act: 

FPDS-NG: Federal Procurement Data System--Next Generation: 

HEART Act: Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act: 

SEC: Securities and Exchange Commission: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

January 26, 2010: 

Congressional Committees: 

Many federal contractors operate globally through offshore 
subsidiaries to take advantage of favorable labor and market 
conditions. GAO and others have found that contractors also use 
offshore subsidiaries to reduce U.S. taxes and maintain subsidiaries 
in tax haven and financial privacy jurisdictions.[Footnote 1] Congress 
included a provision in the Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax 
(HEART) Act of 2008 that addressed concerns about contractor use of 
offshore subsidiaries to minimize U.S. taxes. This provision resulted 
in foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies working on U.S. government 
contracts being required to pay certain payroll taxes.[Footnote 2] The 
Department of Defense (DOD) relies heavily on federal contractors to 
support its missions and in fiscal year 2008 spent approximately $396 
billion on contracts for products and services. DOD uses thousands of 
contractor employees to assist in operations around the world to 
support U.S. forces deployed abroad with services ranging from 
security details to transportation and facility management. 

The Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
2009 directed GAO to report on the rationale, implications, and costs 
and benefits for both the contractor and DOD in using offshore 
subsidiaries, with respect to several issues, including: tax 
liability; legal liability; compliance with cost accounting standards; 
efficiency in contract performance; and contract management and 
contract oversight.[Footnote 3] To fulfill our mandate we briefed your 
staffs on the results of our review. This follow-on report (1) 
assesses trends and purposes for defense contractors' offshore 
subsidiaries; (2) identifies how selected defense contractors used 
offshore subsidiaries to support ongoing defense contracts; and (3) 
assesses DOD oversight and management of defense contractors using 
offshore subsidiaries. 

To conduct our work, we identified 29 U.S. publicly traded defense 
contractors with $1 billion or more in DOD spending in fiscal year 
2008, and reviewed information from Securities and Exchange Commission 
(SEC) filings to determine which of these contractors had offshore 
subsidiaries.[Footnote 4] From these 29 top defense contractors, we 
selected 13 to interview based on a range of the amount of government 
work in fiscal year 2008, location of identified subsidiaries, and 
industry type. In addition, we interviewed three other defense 
contractors as part of the case studies we conducted for a total of 16 
contractors interviewed. We also interviewed knowledgeable attorneys, 
academics, and tax professionals to obtain their views about the 
rationale and implications of using offshore subsidiaries. 

To identify examples of how contractors use subsidiaries and DOD 
contractor management and oversight, we identified the categories of 
DOD services most often performed overseas and selected six 
illustrative contracts as case studies based on several factors 
including the amount of contract dollars obligated, contracting 
command, and services using large numbers of U.S. personnel. For each 
of these contracts, we reviewed data on contractor performance and 
interviewed DOD oversight staff, contracting commands, and company 
officials responsible for these defense contracts. To determine 
whether contractors using offshore subsidiaries selected for case 
studies were subject to payroll taxes, including Social Security, 
Medicare, and federal and state unemployment taxes for U.S. employees, 
we reviewed contract file documents for the contractors and 
interviewed Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) officials. As an 
illustrative example, we also selected one state, Texas, in which four 
of the six selected contractors had a corporate presence, and reviewed 
2009 unemployment benefit claims data. We interviewed state workforce 
officials to determine the impact on the ability of U.S. personnel 
working overseas for offshore subsidiaries to claim unemployment 
benefits. We identified and assessed relevant laws, regulations, GAO 
reports, and DOD policies applicable to contractor offshore 
subsidiaries. 

We conducted our review from February 2009 to January 2010 in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. 
These standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain 
sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We believe 
that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. See appendix I 
for more details on our scope and methodology. 

Background: 

Our prior work has found that U.S. multinational corporations engage 
in offshore operations to reduce labor and administrative costs. 
[Footnote 5] For example, many U.S. companies have found cost 
efficiencies by outsourcing manufacturing jobs based in the U.S. to 
countries with skilled labor available at lower cost. U.S. and foreign 
tax regimes also influence decisions of U.S. multinational 
corporations regarding how much to invest and how many workers to 
employ in particular activities and in particular locations. Tax rules 
also influence where corporations report earning income for tax 
purposes. 

We have reported on the conditions under which a federal contractor in 
a low-tax jurisdiction--one that has no or nominal taxes and no 
requirement for a substantive local presence--may have a tax cost 
advantage when competing for federal contracts.[Footnote 6] The extent 
of the advantage depends on the relative tax liabilities of the 
contractor and its competitors. We also previously reported that 63 of 
the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors in terms of fiscal 
year 2007 federal contract obligations reported having subsidiaries in 
jurisdictions identified as tax haven or financial privacy 
jurisdictions.[Footnote 7] 

Defense contractors may contain a number of separate legal entities. A 
parent corporation may directly own, either wholly or partially, 
multiple subsidiary corporations. In turn, these subsidiaries may own 
other corporate subsidiaries, and any of these corporations may own 
stakes in partnerships. A domestic parent corporation--one that is 
organized under U.S. laws--may head a group of affiliated businesses 
that includes both domestic and foreign subsidiaries and partnerships. 

Companies also consider payroll taxes in managing offshore operations. 
Employers withhold these taxes from employee's wages for Social 
Security and Medicare and match the employee's contribution for these 
taxes.[Footnote 8] Workers make contributions to Social Security 
through payroll taxes that the Treasury credits to the Social Security 
Trust Fund. About 96 percent of the nation's workforce is in social 
security-covered employment and pays tax on its annual earnings. When 
workers pay social security taxes, they earn coverage credits, and 40 
credits--equal to at least 10 years of work--entitle them to social 
security benefits when they reach retirement age. Different 
requirements govern the number of coverage credits necessary to 
receive disability and survivors benefits for workers who become 
disabled or die with relatively short work careers. Most employers 
also pay both a federal and a state unemployment tax, which provide 
unemployment compensation to workers who have lost their jobs. 
Employees in most states do not contribute to unemployment taxes. 
[Footnote 9] 

DOD uses thousands of defense contractors to provide services ranging 
from security details and interpreters to transportation and facility 
management in support of U.S. forces in contingency operations around 
the world. To oversee these contracts, the Defense Contract Management 
Agency (DCMA) is responsible for monitoring contractors' performance 
and management systems to ensure that cost, product performance, and 
delivery schedules are in compliance with contract terms and 
conditions. DCAA, under the authority of the DOD Comptroller, plays a 
critical role in contractor oversight by providing auditing, 
accounting, and financial advisory services for DOD and other federal 
agency contracts. We have reported extensively on DOD contractor 
management and oversight challenges in contingency operations and the 
need for DOD to have better contract and contractor personnel 
information.[Footnote 10] In part for these reasons, DOD contract 
management issues, including sufficient oversight, have been a long- 
standing GAO high-risk area. 

Top Defense Contractors Increased Offshore Subsidiary Use to Support 
Global Commercial Activities and Benefit from Reduced Liabilities: 

From 2003 through 2008, defense contractors increasingly used offshore 
subsidiaries. Our analysis of SEC filings found that in 2008, 29 of 
the top defense contractors--accounting for 41 percent of DOD 
contracting dollars in fiscal year 2008--had at least 1,194 offshore 
subsidiaries.[Footnote 11] Of the total offshore subsidiaries, about 
200 were located in tax haven or financial privacy jurisdictions such 
as Singapore, Hong Kong, Ireland, or Luxembourg. Publicly traded 
defense contractors[Footnote 12] increased their combined use of 
foreign subsidiaries by 26 percent from 2003 through 2008. Of these 
new subsidiaries, most were located in the United Kingdom and Canada, 
while the largest rate of growth was in the British Virgin Islands and 
Aruba. See table 1 for more information on the top 25 defense 
contractor subsidiaries. 

Table 1: Comparison of Top 25 Defense Contractors' Subsidiaries in 
2003 and 2008: 

Defense subsidiaries[A]: Offshore; 
2003: 928; 
2008: 1,169; 
Percentage change: 26%. 

Defense subsidiaries[A]: Domestic; 
2003: 1,533; 
2008: 1,472; 
Percentage change: -4%. 

Source: SEC 10-K filings. 

[A] Four of the 29 top publicly traded defense contractors in 2008 
were not publicly traded companies in 2003 and, therefore, were not 
included in our analysis. 

[End of table] 

According to 13 of the top defense contractors we interviewed, 718 of 
the 738 offshore subsidiaries--or 97 percent--that they reported to 
the SEC in fiscal year 2008 were generally used to support global 
commercial clients, and foreign government contracts rather than DOD 
contracts. In some cases, contractors established offshore 
subsidiaries for market presence and proximity to customers as they 
thought it was important to establish a presence where they do 
business overseas to be more responsive to customer needs. For 
example, one defense contractor established subsidiaries in Singapore 
to assist with equipment manufacturing and repairs of commercial 
aircraft operating throughout Asia because it is more cost-efficient 
than sending the aircraft back to the United States for repairs. Ten 
of the 13 defense contractors told us they establish or acquire 
offshore subsidiaries to take advantage of foreign government markets. 
In one case, a defense contractor explained that it created a 
subsidiary in the Netherlands to hire local nationals in order to win 
a contract with the Dutch government. Contractors also noted that, in 
certain circumstances, they are required to create offshore 
subsidiaries to comply with foreign government requirements. For 
example, one company told us it established a subsidiary in Bahrain to 
comply with Bahrainian law for doing business in that country. In 
another instance, one contractor said that it registered as a local 
company in Iraq to conduct business in compliance with Iraqi law. 

Aside from taking advantage of foreign government markets for 
commercial work, a key benefit of using offshore subsidiaries cited by 
contractors and other experts we spoke with was the ability to reduce 
overall taxes. Several defense companies explained that the use of 
offshore subsidiaries in foreign jurisdictions helps them lower their 
U.S. taxes.[Footnote 13] For example, one defense contractor's 
offshore subsidiary structure decreased its effective U.S. tax rate by 
approximately 1 percent, equaling millions of dollars in tax savings. 
Our review of 2008 SEC filings for the 29 publicly traded defense 
companies found that approximately one-third reported decreasing their 
2008 effective U.S. tax rates through the use of foreign affiliates, 
lower foreign tax rates, and indefinite reinvestment of foreign income 
outside of the United States. 

Defense contractors also told us that creating subsidiaries, whether 
based in the United States or offshore, protects U.S. parent companies 
from certain legal liabilities, although company representatives said 
this was not a primary reason for establishing offshore subsidiaries. 
For example, defense companies and experts noted that subsidiary 
structures limit U.S. parents from liabilities related to changes in 
foreign law and practices. Defense contractors said an offshore 
subsidiary can be used to focus liability in one place, thus shielding 
the rest of the company from potential lawsuits because only the 
assets of the subsidiary would be susceptible. 

While almost all of the 738 offshore subsidiaries were used to support 
commercial and foreign clients, 20--about 3 percent--were used to 
support DOD contracts in fiscal year 2008. However, we do not know the 
percentage of DOD contract dollars supporting activities of offshore 
subsidiaries because contract data do not capture the use of offshore 
subsidiaries specifically. Most of the 13 defense contractors we 
interviewed directed work performed for DOD in a foreign country to a 
company subsidiary in that country. For example, one defense 
contractor's German subsidiary was the prime contractor for a facility 
operations support services contract in Germany. Another contractor 
used an Australian subsidiary to support a Navy research and 
development contract performed in Australia. In contrast, we also 
identified some defense contractors that used subsidiaries registered 
outside the place of contract performance to support DOD service 
contracts abroad. These offshore subsidiaries had no staff or business 
activity where registered. 

Offshore Subsidiaries Supporting DOD Service Contracts Overseas Were 
Principally Used to Avoid Payroll Taxes: 

The primary use of the offshore subsidiaries registered outside the 
contract place of performance--many of those reviewed in our six case 
studies--was to hire U.S. workers to perform services overseas and 
thereby avoid Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes for 
those employees.[Footnote 14] According to contractor officials, the 
practice used in the cases we reviewed allowed the contractor to bid 
lower labor costs when competing for labor-intensive DOD service 
contracts performed abroad. Using offshore subsidiaries also permitted 
contractors to avoid other payroll taxes, such as federal and state 
unemployment insurance. Before the HEART Act took effect in August 
2008, FICA tax payments were not required for U.S. personnel working 
overseas on U.S. government contracts for foreign subsidiaries of U.S. 
companies.[Footnote 15]Although this practice resulted in contract 
cost savings for DOD, it meant that taxes were not paid into the 
Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds as they would have been had 
the services been provided by U.S. personnel employed by a domestic 
entity. Additionally, because these payments were not made, employees 
did not receive coverage credits--earned when workers pay social 
security taxes--for this work. 

DOD and defense contractor officials explained that the use of 
offshore subsidiaries to hire U.S. workers to perform services 
overseas was a practice used for labor-intensive service contracts, 
often for work performed in countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, and 
Kuwait, because of the potential for FICA cost savings. Four of the 
six contractors commonly used offshore subsidiaries when hiring U.S. 
personnel to work on U.S. government contracts beyond the contracts we 
reviewed.[Footnote 16] Defense contractor officials explained that the 
need for security clearances for U.S. personnel working on certain DOD 
contracts, as well export control provisions, limit the types of 
defense work that can be conducted through offshore subsidiaries. 
Typically, when contract functions required personnel with security 
clearances, these personnel were hired through the contractor's U.S. 
subsidiary, while personnel who did not require a security clearance 
were hired though an offshore subsidiary. For one contract task order 
we reviewed, more than 80 percent of the contractor's staff were 
employed by its offshore subsidiary. See table 2 for information on 
the six contracts selected for review. 

Table 2: Contractor and Subsidiary Information for Six Case Study 
Defense Contracts: 

Contractor: Kellogg Brown and Root Services Incorporated; 
Services provided: Logistics support; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $4,901; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Empty]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): Cayman Islands; 
Contract place of performance: Various countries, including Iraq; 
Contract type: Primarily cost-plus. 

Contractor: Combat Support Associates; 
Services provided: Logistics support; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $487; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Empty]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Empty]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): Cayman Islands; 
Contract place of performance: Kuwait; 
Contract type: Cost-plus/award fee. 

Contractor: Fluor Intercontinental Incorporated; 
Services provided: Architect - engineer services; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $196; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Empty]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Empty]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Empty]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): Did not use an offshore subsidiary; 
Contract place of performance: Iraq; 
Contract type: Cost-plus/award fee. 

Contractor: AECOM Government Services, Incorporated; 
Services provided: Maintenance and repair of vehicles; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $143; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Empty]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): Cayman Islands; 
Contract place of performance: Iraq Afghanistan; 
Contract type: Cost-plus/fixed fee. 

Contractor: DynCorp International LLC; 
Services provided: Construction of miscellaneous buildings; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $40; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Empty]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): United Arab Emirates; 
Contract place of performance: Afghanistan; 
Contract type: Fixed-price. 

Contractor: ITT Federal Services GMBH; 
Services provided: Facilities operations and management; 
FY2008 Contract obligation[A] (millions): $35; 
Offshore subsidiary supports contract: [Check]; 
Offshore subsidiary supports other DOD contracts: [Check][B]; 
Offshore subsidiary awarded contract (prime contractor): [Check]; 
Location (for contract reviewed): Germany; 
Contract place of performance: Germany; 
Contract type: Cost-plus/award fee. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[A] The contract dollars obligated value only includes the contract 
actions for the specified service, per FPDS-NG. This value may not 
reflect the contract's full obligation amount in cases where the 
contract has actions under multiple FPDS-NG service categories. 

[B] ITT Federal Services, the parent company of ITT Federal Services 
GMBH, uses another offshore subsidiary to support DOD contracts. 

[End of table] 

Three of the six DOD contractors used subsidiaries registered, but 
that did not have any staff or business activity, in the Cayman 
Islands. Services were provided in locations near the contract place 
of performance. For example, one company used two Cayman Islands 
subsidiaries to hire and pay employees for logistics support contracts 
performed in locations around the world, including the Middle East. 
However, the subsidiaries' payroll processing work is conducted in 
Dubai. According to DOD, these subsidiaries are registered in the 
Cayman Islands to avoid payroll taxes. One company official explained 
that the Cayman Islands are a popular choice for establishing offshore 
subsidiaries because of the ease with which they can be registered due 
to local laws. Furthermore, employees of Cayman Islands corporations 
do not pay taxes in that country. Figure 1 provides an example of how 
defense contractor subsidiaries were used to hire and pay U.S. 
personnel for DOD work performed overseas prior to the HEART Act. 

For five of the six cases we reviewed, DOD reduced contract costs as a 
result of the use of offshore subsidiaries to provide payroll 
functions. Most of the contracts were cost-reimbursement type 
contracts, which authorize agencies to reimburse contractors for 
allowable costs to the extent prescribed in the contract. Taxes are a 
type of allowable cost prescribed in the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation. Consequently, if defense contractors were required to pay 
taxes such as FICA or state and federal unemployment insurance, DOD 
would usually reimburse these costs. Our analysis of the two largest 
service contracts with a combined total of more than $6 billion in 
fiscal year 2008 obligations indicates that DOD saved at least $110 
million per year by not having to provide reimbursement for FICA taxes. 

Figure 1: Example of Contractor Process for Hiring U.S. Personnel 
through Offshore Subsidiaries for DOD Work Overseas Prior to the HEART 
Act: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

DOD Statement of Work requires logistics support services for forces 
in Iraq: 

DOD awards the contract to a U.S.-based defense contractor. The 
contractor needs U.S. employees for various positions supporting the 
contract. 

Does the position require a security clearance? 

If yes: 
Employee is hired through a U.S.-based subsidiary; 
Contractor and employees pay FICA taxes. 

If no: 
Employee is hired through an offshore subsidiary; 
Contractor and employees Do Not pay FICA taxes; 
FICA cost savings provided to DOD. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of figure] 

HEART Act Resulted in Contractors Paying FICA Taxes and Impacted Use 
of Offshore Subsidiaries: 

After the HEART Act took effect, defense contractors that were not 
paying FICA taxes on U.S. personnel working on DOD contracts outside 
of the United States began to submit requests for equitable 
adjustments to recover their newly increased tax costs. For the four 
cost-reimbursement contracts we reviewed that used an offshore 
subsidiary, the increased costs were negotiated with DOD officials and 
were being processed as contract modifications at the time of our 
review. DOD and company officials stated that total contract costs 
have increased by approximately 8 to 10 percent in some cases due to 
both FICA tax payments and increased contract award fees.[Footnote 17] 
As a result, in fiscal year 2009, four of the five contractors using 
offshore subsidiaries to support DOD work requested reimbursement of 
at least $140 million from DOD for new FICA payments on the contracts 
we reviewed as well as some others. 

Several contractors stated that they initially used offshore 
subsidiaries to hire U.S. workers to perform services overseas in 
order to offer competitive prices when bidding for DOD contracts, and 
as this practice grew, it became a competitive necessity. DOD 
officials said they did not think that using an offshore subsidiary to 
avoid FICA taxes provided a competitive advantage to companies since 
each competitor was free to adopt the offshore structure if it chose. 
With the enactment of the HEART Act, some defense companies have 
reconsidered the use of offshore subsidiaries to hire U.S. workers. 
One contractor said it established a subsidiary in 1993 to support a 
DOD logistics contract because, at that time, company tax advisors 
proposed using offshore subsidiaries to achieve cost savings that 
could be passed on to DOD. This contractor is considering whether to 
continue using this subsidiary now that the cost advantage from FICA 
tax savings has been removed. Another contractor said that it had 
transferred U.S. personnel from its Cayman Islands subsidiary to a 
U.S.-based subsidiary and is evaluating whether to close the 
subsidiary. A third contractor said that the HEART Act removed the 
cost advantage when hiring U.S. citizens and residents to perform work 
overseas, but it still uses the subsidiary to manage foreign workers. 

Contractors noted that the requirement of the HEART Act that companies 
hiring U.S. personnel overseas pay FICA taxes may have unintended 
consequences, such as hiring fewer of these employees. Additionally, 
they noted that foreign-based contractors now have a cost advantage in 
competing for overseas DOD contracts because they are not required to 
pay FICA taxes for their U.S. workers. Several company and DOD 
officials also stated that a foreign subsidiary could continue to 
avoid FICA taxes if the parent company changes its ownership stake in 
the foreign subsidiary to 50 percent or less, which is below the 
ownership threshold defined in the law.[Footnote 18] In fact, one 
defense contractor adopted this practice and sold 50 percent of its 
wholly owned subsidiary the day before the HEART Act took effect in 
order for its foreign subsidiary to avoid paying FICA taxes for U.S. 
workers performing DOD work abroad. According to DCAA, another defense 
contractor proposed subcontracting U.S. workers who do not require 
security clearances through a new offshore company to bypass the HEART 
Act requirements. 

Defense Contractors' Offshore Subsidiaries Continue to Avoid 
Unemployment Taxes for Their U.S. Workers: 

While five of the six contractors in our case studies said that 
reducing FICA tax payments was the primary reason for using offshore 
subsidiaries, this practice also allowed the contractors to reduce 
costs by avoiding state and federal unemployment insurance taxes for 
U.S. personnel working overseas. For U.S. citizens performing certain 
work outside the United States, federal law requires only American 
employers to pay unemployment taxes; foreign subsidiaries are not 
defined as American employers under the law. The HEART Act did not 
address unemployment payroll taxes for U.S. personnel working 
overseas, and while these taxes are much lower than FICA taxes, 
contractors have been able to continue to avoid them. Our analysis of 
data from one contractor showed a savings of almost $6 million in 2009 
by not paying state and federal unemployment insurance taxes for U.S. 
workers on its federal government contract that were hired through its 
offshore subsidiary. Table 3 provides a notional example of 
differences in payroll taxes paid for U.S. workers of a domestic 
subsidiary versus an offshore subsidiary. 

Table 3: Notional Comparison of Selected Payroll Taxes Paid by 
Employer for an Employee Earning $100,000 in Wages: 

Employer[A]: Employee wages; 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $100,000; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $100,000; 
U.S. subsidiary: $100,000. 

Employer[A]: FICA taxes: Social Security Old Age, Survivors, and 
Disability Insurance (OASDI) (6.2%); 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $0; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $6,200; 
U.S. subsidiary: $6,200. 

Employer[A]: FICA taxes: Medicare Hospital Insurance (1.45%); 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $0; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $1,450; 
U.S. subsidiary: $1,450. 

Employer[A]: Unemployment taxes: Federal Unemployment Tax (0.8% on 
first $7,000 in wages)[B]; 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $0; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $0; 
U.S. subsidiary: $56. 

Employer[A]: Unemployment taxes: State Unemployment Tax (1% on first 
$9,000 in wages)[C]; 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $0; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $0; 
U.S. subsidiary: $90. 

Total employer payroll taxes: 
Offshore subsidiary, before the HEART Act: $0; 
Offshore subsidiary, after the HEART Act: $7,650; 
U.S. subsidiary: $7,796. 

Source: GAO Analysis: 

[A] While both employers and employees pay equal shares of FICA taxes, 
contributions to federal and state unemployment taxes are usually paid 
by employers but not by employees. 

[B] The federal unemployment tax rate is 6.2% on the first $7,000 of 
annual wages, but this is typically reduced to 0.8% through an offset 
credit for employers who pay the state unemployment tax, resulting in 
a maximum tax of $56.00 per employee, per year (0.008 X $7,000 = 
$56.00). 

[C] Percentage based on average rate paid by Texas employers in 2009. 
State unemployment tax rates vary by state and by employer, so that 
employer rates are based on their experience with the unemployment 
benefits system. The state tax wage bases also vary, from $7,000 in 
several states to more than $30,000 in others. 

[End of table] 

In addition to offshore subsidiaries not owing unemployment taxes, 
their U.S. workers may not be eligible for unemployment benefits 
stemming from this employment. In one state where four of the six case 
study contractors have a corporate presence, we reviewed documentation 
for about 140 former employees of several contractors who were denied 
unemployment benefits in 2009. State workforce officials indicated 
that these benefits were denied because the employees worked for a 
foreign subsidiary and not an American employer. 

Contractors' Use of Offshore Subsidiaries Did Not Impede DOD's 
Contract Oversight: 

In the contracts we reviewed, DOD oversight officials were aware of 
the roles that offshore subsidiaries played in supporting the 
contracts. DOD officials said that oversight mechanisms, such as 
DCAA's annual reviews of incurred costs, provide knowledge of the 
activities of offshore subsidiaries in cost-reimbursement contracts. 
For the contracts for which DCMA had oversight responsibilities, 
officials said that they reviewed DCAA audits and approved company 
disclosure statements, which included information about the 
contractors' use of subsidiaries. Contracting officials said that the 
use of offshore subsidiaries did not negatively affect contract 
schedule or performance. 

In the five contracts we reviewed that used offshore subsidiaries, 
DCAA conducted audits or examined documents related to the specific 
activities of the subsidiary. For example, for two of the contractors, 
DCAA conducted on-site audits of the payroll processing activities 
supported by the offshore subsidiaries. In one case, the contractors' 
offshore subsidiaries are registered in the Cayman Islands, but its 
payroll processing services are performed in Dubai and were audited on 
location by DCAA. One DCAA office that monitors several contractors 
using offshore subsidiaries has developed guidance to facilitate 
reviewing the activities of payroll processing functions. 

Contract file and oversight documents we reviewed, such as contractor 
price proposals and cost accounting disclosure statements, disclosed 
the use of offshore subsidiaries. For example, two of the contract 
files included contractor labor rates, which specified the payroll 
company (either onshore or offshore) assigned for each position. The 
rates also indicate that the fringe benefits paid to employees of the 
two offshore subsidiaries were less than benefits for U.S.-based 
employees. In another case, one company's price negotiation memo 
identified costs related to two offshore subsidiaries, but it did not 
indicate that they were foreign companies or where they were 
registered. 

Although information on the offshore subsidiaries was disclosed in the 
contract files, the clarity of information concerning the offshore 
subsidiaries' role in the contracts we reviewed varied. For example, 
for one of the contracts, a DCMA official said that information 
identifying the contractor's offshore subsidiary was available, but it 
took several months of working with the contractor to confirm the 
subsidiary's purpose in avoiding FICA taxes. In other contracts we 
examined, the role of the offshore subsidiary was more readily 
apparent. For example, one contract file included documents in which 
the defense contractor described the offshore subsidiary as a means of 
saving DOD the cost of reimbursing FICA taxes. The contract file 
indicated that contracting staff reviewed the company's information 
with Army counsel before consenting to the subcontracting arrangement. 

DCAA also has responsibility for reviewing contractor compliance with 
federal cost accounting standards (CAS). For the six contracts in our 
review, DCAA officials indicated that the contractors complied with 
CAS. Contracts and subcontracts executed and performed entirely 
outside of the United States, its territories, and possessions are 
exempt from CAS requirements.[Footnote 19] Although performed 
overseas, according to DCAA and contracting officials, most of the 
contracts we examined were not CAS exempt because some costs were 
incurred within the United States, and in each case the contractors 
followed CAS. In general, defense companies said that even when their 
contracts are CAS exempt, they comply with CAS because the accounting 
system is already in place. 

Conclusion: 

While defense contractors have increased their offshore subsidiaries 
used for commercial purposes, the practice of using offshore 
subsidiaries to avoid certain payroll taxes on U.S. government 
contracts has been addressed by the HEART Act. As a result, 
contractors have begun to pay FICA taxes for U.S. workers hired 
through offshore subsidiaries to support DOD contracts, thus 
contributing to the Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds. This 
requirement will likely lead to a change in corporate decisions to 
create offshore subsidiaries for this purpose. DOD also continues to 
monitor these contractor practices. Notwithstanding these changes, the 
HEART Act did not address unemployment taxes for U.S. workers of 
offshore subsidiaries, and some contractors continue to avoid these 
taxes. While unemployment insurance taxes are much lower than those 
for FICA, this continues to allow for a potential tax advantage for 
contractors hiring U.S. workers through offshore subsidiaries for U.S. 
government contracts performed overseas. 

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

Congress should consider whether further legislative actions are 
needed to require payment of unemployment taxes for U.S. workers hired 
by offshore subsidiaries to perform services overseas. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Departments of Defense and 
Labor, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Securities and Exchange 
Commission. Each agency generally agreed with our report and did not 
provide additional comments. We also obtained third party views from 
defense contractors selected as part of our case studies; they 
generally agreed with our findings and provided technical comments, 
which were incorporated as appropriate. Texas Workforce Commission 
officials reviewed a portion of the draft report related to 
unemployment benefits and agreed with our findings. 

We are sending copies of this report to other interested congressional 
committees and the Secretary of Defense. In addition, this report will 
be available at no charge on GAO's Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

Should you or your staff have any questions on the matters covered in 
this report, please contact John Needham at (202) 512-4841 or 
needhamjk1@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of Congressional 
Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last page of this 
report. 

Key contributors to this report were Amelia Shachoy, Assistant 
Director; W. William Russell; Jennifer Dougherty; Emily Gruenwald; Ami 
Ballenger; Noah Bleicher; Ken Patton; and Susan Neill. 

Signed by: 

John K. Needham: 
Director: 
Acquisition and Sourcing Management: 

List of Committees: 

The Honorable Carl Levin: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John McCain: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Ike Skelton: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Howard P. McKeon: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Armed Services: 
House of Representatives: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To understand the trends and purposes of defense contractors' offshore 
subsidiaries, we identified 45 contractors with $1 billion or more in 
2008 Department of Defense (DOD) spending, based on data from the 
Federal Procurement Data System-Next Generation (FPDS-NG).[Footnote 
20] Of the 45 contractors, we found 29 were publicly traded U.S. 
companies and we corroborated this information with officials at the 
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). We reviewed prior GAO 
reports, performed literature searches, and conducted legal research 
regarding DOD contractors' use of offshore subsidiaries. 

To identify the 29 companies' subsidiaries, we reviewed the 2008 Form 
10-K[Footnote 21] reports filed with the SEC, which require companies 
to disclose their significant subsidiaries. SEC defines a subsidiary 
as significant if (1) the parent corporation's and its other 
subsidiaries' investments in and advances to the subsidiary exceed 10 
percent of the consolidated total assets of the parent corporation and 
its subsidiaries, (2) the parent corporation's and its other 
subsidiaries' proportionate share of total assets (after intercompany 
eliminations) of the subsidiary exceed 10 percent of the consolidated 
total assets of the parent corporation and its subsidiaries, or (3) 
the parent corporation and its other subsidiaries' equity in the 
income from continuing operations exceeds 10 percent of the 
consolidated income from continuing operations of the parent 
corporation and its subsidiaries. The total number of subsidiaries 
reported to the SEC is most likely understated. We also analyzed 
offshore subsidiary data from 2003 and 2008 for 25 of the 29 
contractors to determine differences in the numbers and locations of 
offshore subsidiaries over a 5-year period. We excluded 4 of the 29 
contractors that were not publicly traded in 2003 from our analysis. 

To further understand the reasons companies use offshore subsidiaries, 
we conducted interviews with tax specialists, senior international 
procurement attorneys, as well as tax and legal professors. We 
performed literature searches to find examples of legal cases 
involving the contractors we selected for case studies and their 
subsidiaries from 1980 to present. We specifically looked for cases 
involving liability issues between a parent company and an offshore 
subsidiary. 

To learn more about how defense contractors use offshore subsidiaries, 
we conducted interviews with 13 of the 29 DOD contractors. We selected 
these contractors based on a range of the amount of government work in 
fiscal year 2008, location of identified subsidiaries, and industry 
type. In addition, we interviewed 3 other defense contractors for the 
case studies we conducted, for a total of 16 contractors interviewed. 

We identified the top service categories procured by DOD outside of 
the United States based on fiscal year 2008 FPDS-NG data. The services 
selected were logistics support, construction of miscellaneous 
buildings, facilities operations, repair and maintenance of vehicles, 
and architect and engineer services. From this data, we selected six 
contracts for services overseas to provide illustrative examples of 
services performed outside the United States based on several factors, 
including the amount of contract dollars obligated, type of service 
provided, contracting command, and the contract place of performance, 
as well as services using large numbers of U.S. personnel. We compared 
the FPDS-NG data to DOD Synchronized Pre-deployment and Operational 
Tracker (SPOT) data to identify contracts that employed U.S. workers 
abroad. We also identified contracts in which the prime contractor was 
an offshore subsidiary of a U.S. defense company. For each contract 
selected, we interviewed contractor officials, DOD contracting command 
staff, as well as DOD officials responsible for oversight of the 
contracts. Of the six contracts that met these selection criteria, 
three of the associated contractors were among the 13 interviewed from 
the top 29 defense contractors. Table 4 lists the 16 DOD contractors 
interviewed. 

Table 4: DOD Contractors Interviewed and Their Fiscal Year 2008 DOD 
Contract Obligations: 

DOD contractors: Lockheed Martin Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $28.9 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $12.6 billion. 

DOD contractors: The Boeing Company; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $22.2 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $9.4 billion. 

DOD contractors: General Dynamics Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $15.2 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $5.1 billion. 

DOD contractors: L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $6.8 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $4.7 billion. 

DOD contractors: KBR, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $6.0 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $6.0 billion. 

DOD contractors: ITT Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $4.6 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $2.0 billion. 

DOD contractors: General Electric Company; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $3.5 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $1.0 billion. 

DOD contractors: Computer Sciences Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $2.9 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $2.9 billion. 

DOD contractors: Health Net, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $2.4 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $2.4 billion. 

DOD contractors: Harris Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $1.8 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $0.3 billion. 

DOD contractors: Honeywell International, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $1.7 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $0.7 billion. 

DOD contractors: DynCorp International, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $1.4 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $1.4 billion. 

DOD contractors: Rockwell Collins, Inc.; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $1.2 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: v0.3 billion. 

DOD contractors: Fluor Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $0.7 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $0.4 billion. 

DOD contractors: Combat Support Associates; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $0.5 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: v0.5 billion. 

DOD contractors: AECOM Technology Corporation; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $0.5 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $0.5 billion. 

DOD contractors: Total; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD contract obligations: $100.3 billion; 
Fiscal Year 2008 DOD service contract obligations: $50.1 billion. 

Source: USASpending and FPDS-NG, August 2009. 

[End of table] 

To assess the FPDS-NG data reliability for the contracts selected, we 
corroborated the FPDS-NG data with DOD officials and the contract 
files. We confirmed that contract information reported in FPDS-NG, 
including the contract identification number, contract type, service 
provided, contracted vendors, the contract place of performance, and 
the fiscal year 2008 dollars obligated were sufficiently reliable for 
our purposes. 

To review DOD oversight and management of defense contractor's use of 
offshore subsidiaries, for each of the six contracts selected, we 
reviewed selected contract file documentation, including contracts and 
task orders, price negotiation memorandums, requests for consent to 
subcontract, and contractors' proposed pricing data. In addition, we 
reviewed relevant Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) audit reports 
and documentation. We also reviewed available guidance from 
contracting commands and estimates related to implementing the Heroes 
Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax (HEART) Act of 2008 and interviewed 
cognizant DOD officials, including contracting officers, DCAA and 
Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA) where delegated, as well as 
the contractors. We reviewed the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 
and the Defense FAR Supplement to identify any requirements regarding 
DOD contractors' use of offshore subsidiaries as well as Cost 
Accounting Standards (CAS) and reviewed DOD's public comments on the 
CAS Board's review of the CAS exemption for contracts performed 
entirely overseas. 

To determine whether contractors using offshore subsidiaries selected 
for case studies owed payroll taxes, we reviewed contract file 
documents for the contractors and interviewed DCAA officials. With 
regard to state and federal unemployment taxes, we analyzed contractor 
proposed labor rate information in 2009 to determine the amount of 
state and federal unemployment tax that was avoided on DOD contracts 
through the use of offshore subsidiaries. We also selected one state, 
Texas, in which four of the six selected contractors had a corporate 
presence as an illustrative example. We reviewed data and interviewed 
the state's workforce officials to determine whether employees of 
those companies were denied unemployment benefits in 2009 because the 
employees were hired through a company's offshore subsidiary. We 
assessed the reliability of the state unemployment data and determined 
it was sufficiently reliable for our purposes. In addition, we 
reviewed guidance and interviewed Department of Labor officials about 
federal and state unemployment insurance eligibility requirements. 

We conducted this performance audit from February 2009 through January 
2010 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

International Taxation: Large U.S. Corporations and Federal 
Contractors with Subsidiaries in Jurisdictions Listed as Tax Havens or 
Financial Privacy Jurisdictions. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-157]. Washington, D.C.: December 
18, 2008. 

U.S. Multinational Corporations: Effective Tax Rates are Correlated 
with Where Income Is Reported. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-950]. Washington D.C.: August 12, 
2008. 

DCAA Audits: Allegations That Certain Audits at Three Locations Did 
Not Meet Professional Standards Were Substantiated. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-857]. Washington D.C.: July 22, 
2008. 

Cayman Islands: Business and Tax Advantages Attract U.S. Persons and 
Enforcement Challenges Exist. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-778]. Washington D.C.: July 24, 
2008. 

Defense Acquisitions: DOD's Increased Reliance on Service Contractors 
Exacerbates Long-standing Challenges. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-621T]. Washington, D.C.: January 
23, 2008. 

Offshoring: U.S. Semiconductor and Software Industries Increasingly 
Produce in China and India. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-423]. Washington D.C.: September 7, 
2006. 

Company Formations: Minimal Ownership Information Is Collected and 
Available. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-376]. 
Washington, D.C.: April 7, 2006. 

International Trade: Current Government Data Provide Limited Insight 
into Offshoring of Services. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-932]. Washington D.C.: September 
22, 2004. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] See GAO, International Taxation: Tax Haven Companies Were More 
Likely to Have a Tax Cost Advantage in Federal Contracting, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-856], (Washington D.C.: 
June 30, 2004). 

[2] Pub. L. No. 110-245, § 302. See 26 U.S.C. § 3121(z) and 42 U.S.C. 
§ 410(e). 

[3] Pub. L. No. 110-417, § 844 (2008). 

[4] Throughout this report we use the terms "offshore subsidiaries" 
and "foreign subsidiaries" synonymously. 

[5] GAO, International Trade: Current Government Data Provide Limited 
Insight into Offshoring of Services, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-932] (Washington DC: September 22, 
2004). 

[6] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-856]. 

[7] Financial privacy jurisdictions are jurisdictions that have strict 
bank secrecy laws that persons can use to shield their wealth from 
taxation in their home countries. See GAO, International Taxation: 
Large U.S. Corporations and Federal Contractors with Subsidiaries in 
Jurisdictions Listed as Tax Havens or Financial Privacy Jurisdictions, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-157] (Washington, D.C.: 
December 18, 2008). 

[8] GAO, Tax Compliance: Businesses Owe Billions in Federal Payroll 
Taxes, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-1034T] 
(Washington DC: July 29, 2008). 

[9] New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Alaska withhold unemployment 
insurance taxes directly from both employees and employers. 

[10] GAO, Military Operations: High-Level DOD Action Needed to Address 
Long-standing Problems with Management and Oversight of Contractors 
Supporting Deployed Forces, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-145] (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 18, 
2006). 

[11] SEC requires companies to provide information on significant 
subsidiaries as part of their annual filings. As a result, foreign 
subsidiaries that do not meet the SEC reporting threshold may not be 
listed, and the total number of subsidiaries reported may be 
understated. 

[12] Four of the 29 top publicly traded defense contractors in 2008 
were not publicly traded companies in 2003 and, therefore, were not 
included in our analysis. 

[13] Tax avoidance, the act of using legally available tax planning 
opportunities in order to minimize one's tax liability, is 
permissible. Tax avoidance should be distinguished from tax evasion, 
which is the willful attempt to defeat or circumvent the tax law in 
order to illegally reduce one's tax liability. 

[14] Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) tax is a payroll tax 
on both employers and employees to fund the Social Security and 
Medicare Trust Funds. Employers are required to withhold 7.65 percent 
of employees' covered salaries for FICA taxes, which include Social 
Security and hospital insurance (Medicare) taxes. U.S. employees pay 
FICA taxes as well. Consequently, after the HEART Act, the U.S. 
personnel of these foreign subsidiaries working on U.S. government 
contracts were also required to pay FICA taxes. 

[15] The HEART Act amended the U.S Code to define a foreign subsidiary 
of a U.S. company working on a U.S. government contract as a domestic 
company for certain purposes, thus resulting in the foreign subsidiary 
being required to pay certain payroll taxes for its U.S. workers 
performing services abroad on the government contract as well as 
requiring those U.S. workers to pay their share of the payroll taxes. 
The HEART Act did not address the payment of state or federal 
unemployment taxes for U.S. personnel working outside the United 
States for foreign companies. 

[16] One of the six case study contractors, Fluor Intercontinental, 
did not use an offshore subsidiary to support the DOD contract we 
selected for review. According to DOD and company officials, they also 
did not use offshore subsidiaries to support other DOD contracts. 

[17] Potential contract award fees are based on estimated total 
contract costs. 

[18] The HEART Act applies to foreign companies (and their U.S. 
workers performing on U.S. government contracts) that are part of a 
"controlled group of entities" whose common parent is a U.S. 
corporation. For this purpose, the HEART Act revised the definition of 
a "controlled group of entities" to lower the ownership threshold of a 
parent-subsidiary from "at least 80 percent" to "more than 50 
percent." See 26 U.S.C. § 1563(a)(1). 

[19] 48 C.F.R. § 9903.201-1(b)(14). 

[20] Selection of defense contractors was based on the obligation 
amounts as of February 2009. 

[21] Form 10-K is used for the annual reports or transition reports 
that corporations file with the SEC according to the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934. 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m, 78o(d); 17 C.F.R. § 249.310. 

[End of section] 

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