
"We don't have an obligation to solve America's problems," an Apple executive told the New York Times in connection with Apple's decision to make the iPhone in China. "Our only obligation is making the best product possible."
To be sure, Apple is a business and, as such, it seeks to maximize profits for its shareholders -- not improve the living standards of average Americans. Unfortunately, policymakers tend to forget that basic reality when they are debating policy, especially tax policy.
would make foreign investment more attractive. That would cause investment to flow abroad, and that would reduce the capital which workers in the United States have, so it should reduce wages. A capital flow reduces wages in the United States [and] increases the wages abroad.
Congress needs to remember the Apple executive's statement when considering the territorial proposal. The interests of U.S. multinationals merit consideration, but so, too, do the interests of average Americans.
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This blog post originally appeared on the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities' blog, Off the Charts (www.offthechartsblog.org).