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Acton Commentary

The irony of Patagonia’s tax cut ‘protest’

    In response to the recent Republican-led tax reform—which reduced corporate taxes from 35% to 21%—many companies have responded by handing out surprise bonuses, increased 401(k) matches, and various wage bumps.

    For a company like Patagonia, however, the tax cuts have been labeled “irresponsible,” a symbol of the federal government’s reckless apathy. In response, Patagonia CEO Rose Marcario recently announced that the outdoor clothing company will donate its $10 million tax-cut windfall to its preferred partners in battling climate change.

    “Instead of putting the money back into our business, we’re responding by putting $10 million back into the planet,” Marcario writes. “Our home planet needs it more than we do.”

    Marcario fails to see the striking irony that perseveres amidst the posturing.

    No stranger to public spats with the President, the company has positioned the move as a protest of sorts, both in opposition to the administration’s position on the particular issue at hand—described by Marcario as “woefully inadequate” and “just evil”—as well as to the tax cuts themselves. “Being a responsible company means paying your taxes in proportion to your success and supporting your state and federal governments, which in turn contribute to the health and well-being of civil society,” she writes. “…Taxes protect the most vulnerable in our society, our public lands and other life-giving resources. In spite of this, the Trump administration initiated a corporate tax cut, threatening these services at the expense of our planet.”

    Yet if the goal of this public act is to somehow “stick it to the administration” or highlight the inadequacy of the federal government on this or that pet priority, Marcario fails to see the striking irony that perseveres amidst the posturing. Alas, taken from a different perspective, Patagonia’s outspoken advocacy serves to strengthen one of the lesser known arguments for lower corporate taxes.

    Surely the more common arguments have to do with returning economic power to the boots-on-the-ground decision-makers for the causes of economic growth and efficiency. “Business owners know how to spend the money better than the federal government,” proponents will say. It was upon arguments such as these that the latest bill was passed, and after roughly a year, the results have spoken. “The $1.5 trillion tax overhaul that President Trump signed into law late last year has already given the American economy a jolt, at least temporarily,” write Jim Tankersley and Matt Phillips in the New York Times. “It has fattened the paychecks of most American workers, padded the profits of large corporations and sped economic growth.”

    Yet in highlighting such benefits, we shouldn’t forget that the resulting actions are not only “economic” in nature. Yes, economic power is returning to actual human hands, but that also means it’s returning to the actual human hearts and minds that drive them. Giving companies greater control of their revenue doesn’t just allow them to shift surface-level decisions about wages and product development and capital investment; it allows them to tailor their corporate cultures and philanthropic habits. It gives them more flexibility to fuel social causes that extend well beyond company walls or the more typical shareholder priorities. If a business truly wants to be “socially conscious” or “socially responsible” in some way other than increasing and improving employment or better serving the needs of their customers, such cuts are an asset.

    We should be glad that Patagonia now has greater freedom to use its profits for causes and purposes it actually believes in

    Whether we agree or disagree with Patagonia’s policy preferences or social priorities, the freedom for such an enterprise to more freely express, experiment with and cultivate its own culture and contribution is essential for a flourishing society. We should be glad that Patagonia now has greater freedom to use its profits for causes and purposes it actually believes in—that it can steward more of its output according to its own stated values.

    Indeed, if Marcario truly believes that the efforts and spending priorities of the Trump administration are “woefully inadequate,” and, further, that their basic beliefs about climate change are “just evil,” why would she want to cede more of Patagonia’s resources toward such a contrary agenda? Wouldn’t she prefer to funnel that $10 million toward her company’s own idealistic vision and preferred strategies and objectives? Prior to the Republican tax bill, that same $10 million could very well have been used for increased coal and oil subsidies, never mind a wall between the United States and Mexico. Would this be more or less “irresponsible,” in Marcario’s view? The option is there, if she wants to return it.

    According to Patagonia’s progressive vision, such a realization will likely mean very little. Such firms will still prefer a government that takes these responsibilities off of their hands and co-opts and coerces ideological dissenters into supporting the purported vision. As Marcario notes, “being a responsible company” surely does entail paying our taxes and following the laws of the land. But it ought to mean much, much more.

    The argument about moral efficiency matters. Whatever the merits of Patagonia’s supposed “protest,” it inadvertently demonstrates the quiet strength of economic power, rightly returned.

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    Joseph Sunde is an associate editor and writer for the Acton Institute. His work has appeared in venues such as The Federalist, First Things, The City, The Christian Post, The Stream, Charisma News, Juicy Ecumenism, Ethika Politika, Made to Flourish, and the Center for Faith and Work. Joseph resides in Minneapolis, Minnesota with his wife and four children.