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Reuters/Reuters - Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks to the audience during an Apple
event in San Jose, California October 23, 2012. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith
(Reuters) - Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook will propose tax changes that would
encourage firms to bring home more of their offshore funds when he faces
congressional queries next Tuesday over his company's overseas cash holdings
and tax bills, the Washington Post reported.
Cook's proposals would aim to put more companies' offshore money to use
creating jobs and conducting research and development in the United States, he
said in an interview with the Post.
Cook also told the Post that the 35 percent tax on cash brought back to the
United States is a "very high number."
"We are not proposing that it be zero. I know many of our peers believe that.
But I don't view that. But I think it has to be reasonable," he said.
Apple in a statement to Reuters acknowledged that Cook would be appearing
before the congressional subcommittee but gave no information on the reported
proposals.
Apple paid $6 billion in federal corporate income tax in fiscal 2012, the
company said.
Next Tuesday's hearing is centered on possible changes to the tax code to
ensure that more cash-rich companies bring their money back the United States.
Apple's Cook joins the heads of technology titans Hewlett-Packard Co and
Microsoft Corp who have also been questioned in U.S. Senate subcommittee
hearings on companies keeping cash overseas to lower their tax payments.
(Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Edmund Klamann)