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Report to Congressional Requesters: 

February 2004: 

INTERNATIONAL TAXATION: 

Information on Federal Contractors With Offshore Subsidiaries: 

[Hyperlink, http: //www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-293]: 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Over Half of the 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors Report 
Having a Subsidiary in a Tax Haven Country, Including Some that Report 
Having a Foreign Sales Corporation in a Tax Haven Country: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: List of Tax Haven Countries: 

Appendix III: The 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors 
(Fiscal Year 2001): 

Appendix IV: Federal Contractors that Report Having a Subsidiary in a 
Tax Haven Country: 

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: The 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors: 

Table 2: Corporations Among the 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal 
Contractors that Report Having Subsidiaries and Foreign Sales 
Corporations Incorporated in Tax Haven Countries: 

Letter February 2, 2004: 

The Honorable Byron Dorgan: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Competition, Foreign Commerce, and Infrastructure: 
Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Carl Levin: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations: 
Committee on Governmental Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

Every year, U.S.-based multinational corporations transfer hundreds of 
billions of dollars of goods and services between their affiliates in 
the United States and their foreign subsidiaries. Such transactions may 
be a part of normal business operations for corporations with foreign 
subsidiaries. However, it is generally recognized that given the 
variation in corporate tax rates across countries, an incentive exists 
for corporations with foreign subsidiaries to reduce their overall tax 
burden by maximizing the income they report in countries with low 
income tax rates, and minimizing the income they report in or 
repatriate to countries with high income tax rates. Various studies 
have suggested that U.S.-based multinational corporations appear to 
engage in transactions such as these that shift income from their 
affiliates in high-tax countries to subsidiaries in low-tax countries 
to take advantage of the differences in tax rates in foreign 
countries.[Footnote 1]

In 2002, GAO reported that 4 of the 100 largest publicly traded federal 
contractors are incorporated in a "tax haven" country that either does 
not tax corporate income or taxes the income at a low rate.[Footnote 2] 
As a follow-up to the report, you asked us to determine which, if any, 
of the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors we identified in 
our 2002 report have subsidiaries that are incorporated in a tax haven 
country. You further asked us to determine, to the extent possible, 
which of these subsidiaries are Foreign Sales Corporations, a type of 
corporation that can exempt a portion of its foreign sales income from 
U.S. tax.

To determine which, if any, of the 100 largest publicly traded federal 
contractors (in terms of fiscal year 2001 contract obligations) we 
identified in our 2002 report have subsidiaries in a tax haven country, 
we reviewed various public documents the corporations filed with the 
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on its Electronic Data 
Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval (EDGAR) system. We used information 
from the documents each corporation filed with the SEC that were the 
most recent available at the time we reviewed that corporation's 
filings. However, as the SEC only requires public corporations to 
report their significant subsidiaries,[Footnote 3] we were only able to 
identify those subsidiaries that the contractors reported to the SEC, 
or disclosed through other means. In certain cases, we obtained 
subsidiary information from corporate representatives or the 
corporations' Web sites. To determine whether a country is considered a 
tax haven, we referred to the criteria the Organisation of Economic Co-
operation and Development (OECD) has developed to characterize tax 
haven countries. We did not attempt to determine if corporations with 
subsidiaries in tax haven countries engaged in transactions with their 
subsidiaries intended to reduce their overall tax burden. (For a more 
detailed discussion of our scope and methodology, see app. I). We 
conducted our review between July and December 2003 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief: 

Fifty-nine of the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors from 
fiscal year 2001 report having a subsidiary in a tax haven country. 
Fifty-eight of these 59 corporations also report having additional 
foreign subsidiaries in countries other than tax havens. Likewise, 26 
of the 59 corporations that report having a subsidiary in a tax haven 
country report that at least one of these subsidiaries is a Foreign 
Sales Corporation. Four of these 26 contractors also report having 
additional Foreign Sales Corporations in countries other than tax 
havens. However, as the SEC only requires corporations to report their 
significant subsidiaries, there may be additional corporations among 
the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors that have a 
subsidiary in a tax haven country. Likewise, some corporations that 
report having a subsidiary in a tax haven country could have additional 
subsidiaries in tax haven countries that they have not reported. The 
simple existence of a subsidiary in a tax haven country does not 
signify that a corporation has established that subsidiary primarily 
for the purpose of reducing its overall tax burden.

Background: 

There are few corporations of any significant size that are not faced 
with applying international tax rules to some aspect of their business. 
Under the U.S. income tax system, domestic corporations are taxed on 
income regardless of where it is earned. Thus, U.S. corporations are 
subject to U.S. tax on income from foreign operations in addition to 
the foreign tax they pay on such income in the country where it is 
earned.[Footnote 4] However, income a corporation's foreign subsidiary 
earns is usually not subject to U.S. tax until the subsidiary 
repatriates the income to its U.S. parent.[Footnote 5] The deferral of 
U.S. tax liability from a foreign subsidiary's income can provide that 
subsidiary's U.S. parent corporation with financial benefits if this 
income is invested abroad on a long-term basis.

Likewise, every year, U.S.-based multinational corporations transfer 
hundreds of billions of dollars of goods and services between their 
affiliates in the United States and their foreign subsidiaries. 
Although such transactions may be a part of normal business operations 
for multinational corporations, variations in corporate tax rates 
across countries create the potential for multinational corporations to 
engage in transactions with their foreign subsidiaries with the purpose 
of reducing their overall tax burden. For example, multinational 
corporations may try to maximize the income they report in countries 
with low tax rates through the pricing of intercompany transactions of 
goods or services. Pricing of intercompany transactions across tax 
jurisdictions can affect the distribution of profits and, therefore, 
taxable income among related companies. Underpayment of U.S. income 
taxes can result from the inappropriate pricing of transactions between 
interrelated companies with operations in both the United States and in 
a country with a lower tax rate.[Footnote 6] Likewise, multinational 
corporations may try to minimize income reported in the United States 
through deductible interest payments to their subsidiaries in low-tax 
countries. Under certain circumstances, the interest expense that U.S. 
corporations pay on debt that their foreign subsidiaries issue them is 
deductible for U.S. tax purposes, and can serve to reduce a 
corporation's taxable income in the United States. Transactions 
intended to reduce a corporation's overall tax burden may be 
particularly relevant to corporations with subsidiaries in tax haven 
countries that impose no or nominal tax on income.

The United States has, however, enacted various legislative provisions 
since the 1970s intended to reduce the amount of U.S. tax that U.S. 
corporations pay on income earned from the export of goods and services 
to foreign countries. One set of these provisions, the Foreign Sales 
Corporation (FSC) provisions, was enacted in 1984 as a replacement to 
the Domestic International Sales Corporation (DISC) provisions (enacted 
in 1971).[Footnote 7] A Foreign Sales Corporation generally is not 
subject to U.S. income tax on certain foreign trade income, and a U.S. 
corporation generally is not subject to U.S. income tax on dividends 
paid by a Foreign Sales Corporation out of certain earnings. As such, 
Foreign Sales Corporations and their parent corporations can receive a 
tax benefit from income reported in the United States that is not 
available to U.S. corporations that report income from other types of 
foreign subsidiaries, which is taxed without the FSC exemption, 
generally at the time it is repatriated to the United States.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) estimates that in 2000, the latest 
year for which data are available,[Footnote 8] there were 4,200 Foreign 
Sales Corporations representing gross receipts of $349.0 billion, total 
income of $43.9 billion, taxable income of $6.7 billion, and a tax 
liability of $2.3 billion. An estimated 88 percent of these Foreign 
Sales Corporations reported receipts from the sale of manufactured 
products. Foreign Sales Corporations can only be established in U.S. 
possessions (excluding Puerto Rico) or countries with whom the United 
States has an agreement on the exchange of tax information, including a 
number of tax haven countries.

In 2000, the FSC Repeal and Extraterritorial Income Exclusion 
Act[Footnote 9] replaced the FSC provisions with the Extraterritorial 
Income (ETI) provisions.[Footnote 10] The ETI provisions provide 
corporations with tax benefits similar to those the FSC provisions 
provide. However, the ETI provisions permit corporations to exclude 
certain qualifying foreign trade income from U.S. tax, and are not 
restricted to the export of goods and services through a foreign 
corporation. Although the FSC provisions were repealed in 2000, Foreign 
Sales Corporations in existence prior to September 30, 2000, can 
continue to use the FSC rules for transactions related to a binding 
contract with an outside party.

Over Half of the 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors Report 
Having a Subsidiary in a Tax Haven Country, Including Some that Report 
Having a Foreign Sales Corporation in a Tax Haven Country: 

Eighty-six of the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors from 
fiscal year 2001 report having a foreign subsidiary, of which 59 report 
having a subsidiary incorporated in a tax haven country. Of these 59 
corporations, 58 also report having additional foreign subsidiaries in 
countries other than tax havens. However, as the SEC only requires 
public corporations to report their significant subsidiaries, there may 
be additional corporations among the 100 largest publicly traded 
federal contractors that have a subsidiary in a tax haven country. 
Likewise, some corporations that report having a subsidiary in a tax 
haven country could have additional subsidiaries in tax haven countries 
that they have not reported. However, given SEC regulations, these 
subsidiaries would not be "significant" in relation to their parent 
corporations' consolidated assets or equity in income from continuing 
operations. (For a complete list of the corporations among the 100 
largest publicly traded federal contractors from fiscal year 2001 that 
report having a subsidiary in a tax haven country, see app. IV).

In addition, 26 of the 59 federal contractors that report having a 
subsidiary in a tax haven country report that at least one of these 
subsidiaries is a Foreign Sales Corporation. Four of these 26 
corporations also report having additional Foreign Sales Corporations 
in countries other than tax havens. Other than these 26 corporations, 
one additional corporation among the 100 largest publicly traded 
federal contractors reports having a Foreign Sales Corporation. The 
predominance of Foreign Sales Corporations incorporated in tax haven 
countries among the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors is 
comparable to the incorporation locations of all Foreign Sales 
Corporations. According to the IRS, in 2000 an estimated 92 percent of 
all Foreign Sales Corporations were incorporated in the tax haven 
countries of the U.S. Virgin Islands (52 percent), Barbados (35 
percent), and Bermuda (5 percent). According to an IRS official, the 
vast majority of Foreign Sales Corporations are incorporated in tax 
haven countries because, although a portion of the income these 
corporations earn is exempt from U.S. tax, this income may be subject 
to tax in the country where it is earned. As such, incorporating a 
Foreign Sales Corporation in a country with a high tax rate would not 
provide the overall tax savings that the FSC provisions would otherwise 
provide.

As SEC regulations do not specifically require corporations to report 
if a subsidiary is a Foreign Sales Corporation in their public 
filings,[Footnote 11] additional corporations among the 100 largest 
publicly traded federal contractors that may have a Foreign Sales 
Corporation in a tax haven or other country. Furthermore, some 
corporate representatives we spoke with stated that their Foreign Sales 
Corporations are largely dormant or are being phased out, given that 
the FSC benefit has been replaced by the ETI benefit. (For a complete 
list of the corporations among the 100 largest federal contractors from 
fiscal year 2001 that report having a Foreign Sales Corporation in a 
tax haven country, see app. IV).

The simple existence of a subsidiary in a tax haven country does not 
signify that a corporation has established that subsidiary primarily 
for the purpose of reducing its overall tax burden (although the 
Foreign Sales Corporation benefit was created for that express 
purpose). Likewise, we did not attempt to determine if corporations 
with subsidiaries in tax haven countries engaged in transactions with 
their subsidiaries intended to reduce their overall tax burden.

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to the IRS and the SEC for their 
comment. In a letter dated January 12, 2004, the IRS stated that they 
had no comments with regard to tax administration issues, and had 
referred the report to the Department of The Treasury to comment on tax 
policy issues. On January 12, Treasury provided oral comments on 
several technical issues, which we incorporated into this report where 
appropriate. The SEC stated in a January 13, 2004, letter that the 
report provided a useful description of the 100 largest publicly traded 
federal contractors' offshore subsidiaries and related tax matters. On 
the same date, the SEC also provided an additional oral comment on a 
technical matter, which we incorporated into this report.

As arranged with your offices, unless you publicly announce its 
contents earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 
30 days after the date of this report. We will then send copies of this 
report to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Chairman, 
Securities and Exchange Commission, 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 on 
(202) 512-9110. Key contributors to this report are listed in appendix 
V.

Signed by: 

James R. White: 
Director, Tax Issues: 

[End of section]

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

We used the list of the 100 largest publicly traded federal contractors 
in fiscal year 2001 identified in our October 2002 report, Information 
on Federal Contractors That Are Incorporated Offshore ( [Hyperlink, 
http: //www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-03-194R]) as the 
basis to determine which, if any, of the 100 largest publicly traded 
federal contractors have subsidiaries in tax haven countries. To 
identify which, if any, of these corporations report having a 
subsidiary in a tax haven country, we reviewed various public documents 
the corporations filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission 
(SEC) on its Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval (EDGAR) 
system. For U.S. corporations, we reviewed the lists of subsidiaries 
that public corporations are required to include as an exhibit (Exhibit 
21)[Footnote 12] to a number of forms they file with the SEC. We 
obtained this exhibit from each corporation's Form 10-K[Footnote 13] 
because, according to the SEC, although U.S. corporations can include 
Exhibit 21 with a number of forms, they most often file this exhibit 
with Form 10-K on an annual basis. However, for 2 U.S. corporations, we 
obtained subsidiary information from Exhibit 21 to Form S-1,[Footnote 
14] because that form was the most recent filed with the SEC that 
contained this exhibit. For foreign corporations, we obtained 
subsidiary information from Form 20-F,[Footnote 15] or an exhibit to 
this form (Exhibit 8), which foreign corporations registered with the 
SEC file on an annual basis instead of Form 10-K. For each corporation, 
we reported information from the Exhibit 21 or Form 20-F that was the 
most recent available at the time we reviewed that corporation's 
filings with the SEC.

As the SEC only requires public corporations to report their 
significant subsidiaries, we were only able to identify those 
subsidiaries the contractors reported to the SEC or disclosed through 
other means. Within Exhibit 21 or Form 20-F, public corporations may 
omit information on those subsidiaries that do not constitute a 
significant subsidiary when considered in the aggregate. The SEC 
considers a subsidiary to be significant if: 1) the parent corporation 
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 and 
its other subsidiaries' proportionate share of the total assets (after 
intercompany eliminations) of the subsidiary exceeds 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[Footnote 16] exceeds 10 
percent of the consolidated income from continuing operations of the 
parent corporation and its subsidiaries. Corporations may also omit 
information on consolidated wholly owned multiple subsidiaries carrying 
on the same line of business (such as chain stores). Likewise, the SEC 
does not specifically require corporations to report whether a 
subsidiary is a Foreign Sales Corporation within their 
filings.[Footnote 17]

For a number of corporations, we supplemented information from EDGAR 
with information from corporate representatives or the corporations' 
Web sites. For example, we contacted 22 corporations to clarify or 
supplement unclear or incomplete information they reported in their 
Exhibit 21 filings. We also obtained information on the principle 
subsidiaries for 5 foreign corporations that are not registered with 
the SEC from annual reports or other information available on these 
corporations' Web sites. Furthermore, we contacted the 18 corporations 
that did not report having any foreign subsidiaries in their SEC 
filings to verify this information. Some of these corporations 
disclosed having foreign subsidiaries that they did not report in their 
SEC filings (implying that in the aggregate, these corporations did not 
deem these subsidiaries to be significant), including 4 that disclosed 
having a foreign subsidiary in a tax haven country (these corporations 
are noted in apps. III and IV). We did not contact corporations that 
reported having foreign subsidiaries only in countries other than tax 
havens to determine if they had additional subsidiaries incorporated in 
a tax haven country that they did not report.[Footnote 18]

To determine whether a country is considered a tax haven, we referred 
to the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development's work on 
tax havens - OECD, Progress in Identifying and Eliminating Harmful Tax 
Practices (2000); The OECD's Project on Harmful Tax Practices: The 2001 
Progress Report (November 2001); and List of Unco-operative Tax Havens 
(April 18, 2002, and revised on May 20, 2003). Although the OECD does 
not provide a unique definition of the term "tax haven," we use the 
term in this report because it is the term we used in our October 2002 
report to refer to countries that impose no or nominal tax on corporate 
income, and because the OECD has established a set of criteria to 
characterize a tax haven country or jurisdiction. Specifically, the 
OECD stipulates four major features of a tax haven: 1) no or nominal 
income tax, 2) rules that prevent the effective exchange of information 
with foreign tax authorities, 3) a lack of transparency in the 
operation of legislative, legal, or administrative provisions, and 4) 
the absence of a requirement for a substantive local presence. In 
general, the OECD classifies a country as a tax haven if it meets the 
criteria of no or nominal income tax, and at least one of the other 
criteria. (For a list of countries the OECD considers tax havens, see 
app. II).

Finally, although we identify the corporations among the 100 largest 
publicly traded federal contractors that report having a subsidiary in 
a tax haven country, we did not attempt to determine if these 
corporations engaged in transactions with their subsidiaries intended 
to reduce their overall tax burden.

[End of section]

Appendix II: List of Tax Haven Countries: 

The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has 
identified 39 countries or jurisdictions that they consider to be tax 
havens.[Footnote 19] In this report we refer to these 39 countries and 
jurisdictions as tax havens: 

* 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;
* Vanuatu; 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: The 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors 
(Fiscal Year 2001): 

The following table lists the 100 largest federal contractors that are 
publicly traded corporations, their rank among the 100 largest publicly 
traded federal contractors in fiscal year 2001, the dollar amount of 
their fiscal year 2001 federal contracts, the state or country where 
they are incorporated, and the number of their foreign subsidiaries. 
Unless otherwise noted, we obtained the information on the number of 
each corporation's foreign subsidiaries from forms filed with the 
Securities and Exchange Commission. We were unable to provide 
information on the number of foreign subsidiaries for the Lockheed 
Martin Corporation, which did not include this information in an 
Exhibit 21 filing, and did not respond to our request for this 
information before this report was completed. Likewise, Honeywell 
International, Inc., which did not report having any foreign 
subsidiaries in its Exhibit 21 filing, provided us with information on 
its Foreign Sales Corporations, but not its other foreign subsidiaries.

Table 1: The 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal Contractors: 

Company name: Accenture, Inc.; 
Rank: 58; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$278,990; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 153.

Company name: Affiliated Computer Services, Inc.; 
Rank: 37; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$451,067; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 24.

Company name: Alliant Techsystems, Inc.; 
Rank: 20; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$826,269; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Altria Group, Inc.[B]; 
Rank: 80; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$149,634; 
Incorporation location: Virginia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 263.

Company name: American Management Systems, Inc.; 
Rank: 13; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,675,676; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 17.

Company name: AmerisourceBergen Corporation; 
Rank: 10; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,900,969; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 1[R].

Company name: Anteon International Corporation[C]; 
Rank: 41; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$406,304; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 4[R].

Company name: Anthem, Inc.; 
Rank: 55; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$293,153; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Archer Daniels Midland Company; 
Rank: 70; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$189,876; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 9.

Company name: AT&T Corporation; 
Rank: 43; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$398,326; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 116[R].

Company name: Avaya, Inc.; 
Rank: 94; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$115,079; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 62.

Company name: BAE Systems, plc; 
Rank: 16; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$972,526; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 6[DS].

Company name: Ball Corporation; 
Rank: 78; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$153,613; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 47.

Company name: Bearingpoint, Inc.[E]; 
Rank: 90; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$177,456; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 101.

Company name: Berkshire Hathaway, Inc.; 
Rank: 97; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$111,993; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 13.

Company name: The Boeing Company; 
Rank: 2; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$14,362,243; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 96.

Company name: BP, plc; 
Rank: 36; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$480,858; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 27.

Company name: CACI International, Inc.; 
Rank: 46; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$380,524; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: Cardinal Health, Inc.; 
Rank: 40; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$422,120; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 98.

Company name: CNF, Inc.; 
Rank: 54; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$295,113; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 49[R].

Company name: Computer Associates International; 
Rank: 75; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$172,202; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 45.

Company name: Computer Sciences Corporation; 
Rank: 14; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,648,495; 
Incorporation location: Nevada; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 97.

Company name: ConAgra Foods, Inc.; 
Rank: 83; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$131,850; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 4.

Company name: Cubic Corporation; 
Rank: 91; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$117,054; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 6.

Company name: DaimlerChrysler AG; 
Rank: 38; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$435,921; 
Incorporation location: Germany; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 1.

Company name: Dell, Inc.[F]; 
Rank: 34; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$493,423; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 76.

Company name: DRS Technologies, Inc.; 
Rank: 93; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$116,395; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 10.

Company name: Electronic Data Systems Corporation; 
Rank: 26; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$560,767; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 313.

Company name: Engineered Support Systems, Inc.; 
Rank: 50; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$321,384; 
Incorporation location: Missouri; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0[R].

Company name: Exxon Mobil Corporation; 
Rank: 21; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$707,283; 
Incorporation location: New Jersey; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 90.

Company name: FedEx Corporation; 
Rank: 64; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$214,907; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 75.

Company name: Fluor Corporation; 
Rank: 18; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$931,885; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 202.

Company name: Ford Motor Company; 
Rank: 73; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$179,126; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 46.

Company name: Foster Wheeler, Ltd.; 
Rank: 57; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$286,298; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 92.

Company name: Furniture Brands International, Inc.; 
Rank: 96; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$112,395; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 9.

Company name: GenCorp, Inc.; 
Rank: 84; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$131,848; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 29.

Company name: General Dynamics Corporation; 
Rank: 6; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$4,928,238; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 26[G].

Company name: General Electric Company; 
Rank: 12; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,808,984; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 10.

Company name: General Motors Corporation; 
Rank: 63; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$222,440; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 200.

Company name: Goodrich Corporation; 
Rank: 52; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$308,283; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 62.

Company name: GTSI Corporation; 
Rank: 42; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$402,408; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0[R].

Company name: Halliburton Company; 
Rank: 30; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$534,177; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 131.

Company name: Harris Corporation; 
Rank: 45; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$389,970; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 32.

Company name: Health Net, Inc.; 
Rank: 17; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$944,618; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: Hillenbrand Industries, Inc.; 
Rank: 95; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$114,456; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 27.

Company name: Holly Corporation; 
Rank: 87; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$121,831; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Honeywell International, Inc.; 
Rank: 15; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,442,018; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 3[R].

Company name: Humana, Inc.; 
Rank: 44; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$394,135; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: International Business Machines Corporation; 
Rank: 33; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$498,656; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 98.

Company name: The IT Group, Inc.[H]; 
Rank: 22; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$671,977; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 25[R].

Company name: ITT Industries, Inc.; 
Rank: 19; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$879,772; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 142.

Company name: Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc.; 
Rank: 29; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$536,130; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 48.

Company name: Johnson Controls, Inc.; 
Rank: 53; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$299,592; 
Incorporation location: Wisconsin; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 76.

Company name: L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.; 
Rank: 35; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$482,248; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 45[R].

Company name: Lockheed Martin Corporation; 
Rank: 1; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$17,951,303; 
Incorporation location: Maryland; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: unknown.

Company name: Lucent Technologies, Inc.; 
Rank: 98; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$107,402; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 93.

Company name: ManTech International Corporation; 
Rank: 56; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$291,513; 
Incorporation location: New Jersey; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 15.

Company name: McDermott International, Inc.; 
Rank: 11; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$1,885,243; 
Incorporation location: Panama; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 10.

Company name: McKesson Corporation; 
Rank: 88; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$121,526; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Motor Oil (Hellas) Corinth Refineries S.A.; 
Rank: 69; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$199,462; 
Incorporation location: Greece; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2[S].

Company name: Motorola, Inc.; 
Rank: 27; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$552,520; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 20.

Company name: Newport News Shipbuilding, Inc.[I]; 
Rank: 4; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$5,689,539; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Northrop Grumman Corporation[J]; 
Rank: 5; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$5,636,124; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 52[R].

Company name: Olin Corporation; 
Rank: 100; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$104,121; 
Incorporation location: Virginia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 13.

Company name: Oracle Corporation; 
Rank: 65; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$212,468; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 84.

Company name: Orbital Sciences Corporation; 
Rank: 77; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$161,286; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Oshkosh Truck Corporation; 
Rank: 25; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$566,511; 
Incorporation location: Wisconsin; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 20.

Company name: Parker-Hannifin Corporation; 
Rank: 79; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$153,562; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 95.

Company name: PC Connection, Inc.; 
Rank: 92; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$116,919; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Philipp Holzmann AG; 
Rank: 23; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$655,360; 
Incorporation location: Germany; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 5[S].

Company name: The Procter and Gamble Company; 
Rank: 62; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$224,212; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 306.

Company name: Raytheon Company; 
Rank: 3; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$6,123,605; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 95.

Company name: Rockwell Automation, Inc.[K]; 
Rank: 47; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$372,131; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 10.

Company name: Rockwell Collins, Inc.; 
Rank: 61; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$234,075; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: Rolls-Royce, plc; 
Rank: 49; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$327,792; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 30[LS].

Company name: Science Applications International Corporation; 
Rank: 8; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$2,654,492; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 15.

Company name: Siemens AG; 
Rank: 85; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$124,452; 
Incorporation location: Germany; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 102.

Company name: Smiths Group, plc; 
Rank: 72; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$184,232; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 11[S].

Company name: Sprint Corporation; 
Rank: 82; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$136,200; 
Incorporation location: Kansas; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 56.

Company name: SRA International, Inc.; 
Rank: 60; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$234,926; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Telos Corporation; 
Rank: 89; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$118,803; 
Incorporation location: Maryland; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0[MR].

Company name: Tetra Tech, Inc.; 
Rank: 66; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$211,705; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 3.

Company name: Texas Instruments, Inc.; 
Rank: 74; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$178,631; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 51.

Company name: Textron, Inc.; 
Rank: 24; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$600,533; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 19.

Company name: The Titan Corporation; 
Rank: 39; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$424,087; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 4.

Company name: TRW, Inc.[N]; 
Rank: 9; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$2,499,816; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 33[R].

Company name: Tyco International, Ltd.; 
Rank: 68; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$206,387; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 1,736.

Company name: Unisys Corporation; 
Rank: 28; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$549,905; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 8.

Company name: United Industrial Corporation; 
Rank: 76; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$171,044; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: United Technologies Corporation; 
Rank: 7; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$3,500,465; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 66.

Company name: URS Corporation; 
Rank: 59; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$262,489; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 94.

Company name: Valero Energy Corporation; 
Rank: 51; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$310,202; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 10.

Company name: Veridian Corporation[O]; 
Rank: 71; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$188,960; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: Verizon Communications, Inc.; 
Rank: 67; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$207,210; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 2.

Company name: The Wackenhut Corporation[P]; 
Rank: 48; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$356,968; 
Incorporation location: Florida; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 47.

Company name: Washington Group International, Inc.; 
Rank: 31; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$531,234; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 35.

Company name: Weston Solutions, Inc.[Q]; 
Rank: 86; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$124,380; 
Incorporation location: Pennsylvania; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 1[R].

Company name: WGL Holdings, Inc.; 
Rank: 99; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$105,260; 
Incorporation location: Virginia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 0.

Company name: WorldCom, Inc.; 
Rank: 32; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$503,811; 
Incorporation location: Georgia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 187.

Company name: Xerox Corporation; 
Rank: 81; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$139,224; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries: 216.

Total; Federal contract obligations FY 2001 (dollars in thousands)[A]: 
$101,770,865. 

Sources: General Services Administration, Securities and Exchange 
Commission, corporate representatives, and GAO Internet research.

[A] Contract obligations include contracts with subsidiaries.

[B] Formerly Philip Morris Companies, Inc.

[C] Formerly Azimuth Technologies, Inc.

[D] BAE Systems, plc also participates in eight foreign joint ventures.

[E] Formerly KPMG Consulting, Inc.

[F] Formerly Dell Computer Corporation.

[G] Does not include Veridian Corporation (or its subsidiaries), which 
General Dynamics acquired after fiscal year 2001. Information on 
Veridian Corporation and its subsidiaries are presented separately in 
this report.

[H] Assets acquired by the Shaw Group in May 2002; corporation still 
exists in bankruptcy.

[I] Merged with Northrop Grumman Corporation in November 2001.

[J] Does not include Newport News Shipbuilding or TRW, Inc. (or their 
subsidiaries), which Northrop Grumman acquired after fiscal year 2001. 
Information on Newport News Shipbuilding and TRW, Inc., and their 
subsidiaries are presented separately in this report.

[K] Formerly Rockwell International Corporation.

[L] Rolls-Royce, plc also participates in 20 foreign joint ventures.

[M] Telos Corporation also holds a 50 percent interest in a foreign 
joint venture that has been inactive since 2000.

[N] Acquired by Northrop Grumman Corporation in December 2002.

[O] Acquired by General Dynamics Corporation in August 2003.

[P] Acquired by Group 4 Falck (Denmark) in May 2002; does not include 
Wackenhut Corrections Corporation (or its subsidiaries), which is now 
an independent corporation.

[Q] Formerly Roy F. Weston, Inc. and now privately held.

[R] Corporation provided information on foreign subsidiaries directly 
to GAO.

[S] Information on foreign subsidiaries from annual report or other 
information available on corporation's Web site.

[End of table] 

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Federal Contractors that Report Having a Subsidiary in a 
Tax Haven Country: 

The following table shows the 59 corporations among the 100 largest 
publicly traded federal contractors that report having a subsidiary 
incorporated in a tax haven country. Although the dollar amount of 
contract obligations for each corporation includes contracts with their 
subsidiaries, we did not identify if these obligations were related to 
subsidiaries in tax haven countries. The number of foreign subsidiaries 
and number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax haven 
countries include information on Foreign Sales Corporations. For the 26 
corporations that report having a subsidiary in a tax haven country 
that is a Foreign Sales Corporation, separate information on the number 
of Foreign Sales Corporations and the number and location(s) of Foreign 
Sales Corporations in tax haven countries is provided. The information 
provided for each corporation is based on its latest available 
information either filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, 
provided to GAO, or presented on its Web site at the time we performed 
our review of that corporation. Unless otherwise noted, we obtained the 
information on the number and locations of foreign subsidiaries and 
Foreign Sales Corporations for each corporation from forms filed with 
the SEC.

Table 2: Corporations Among the 100 Largest Publicly Traded Federal 
Contractors that Report Having Subsidiaries and Foreign Sales 
Corporations Incorporated in Tax Haven Countries: 

Company name: Accenture, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $278,990; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 153; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 19: 
Andorra (1); 
Bermuda (5); 
Gibraltar (8); 
Isle of Man (2); 
Mauritius (3); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Affiliated Computer Services, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $451,067; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 24; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Barbados; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Altria Group, Inc.[C]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $149,634; 
Incorporation location: Virginia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 263; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 9; 
Bahamas (1); 
British Virgin Islands (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Panama (3); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (3); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Archer Daniels Midland Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $189,876; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 9; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Cayman Islands; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: AT&T Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $398,326; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 116; 
(Subsidiary information provided directly by corporation); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 5; 
Cyprus (2); 
Panama (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Avaya, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $115,079; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 62; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 4; 
Bahrain (1); 
Barbados (1); 
Gibraltar (1); 
Panama (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Bearingpoint, Inc.[D]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $117,456; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 101; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 22; 
Aruba (2); 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (8); 
British Virgin Islands (2); 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Netherlands Antilles (6); 
Panama (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: The Boeing Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $14,362,243; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 96; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 31; 
Bermuda (6); 
British Virgin Islands (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (23); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: BP, plc; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $480,858; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 27; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Guernsey; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Cardinal Health, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $422,120; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 98; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 5; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
British Virgin Islands (1); 
Malta (1); 
St. Lucia (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: CNF, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $295,113; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 49; 
(Subsidiary information provided directly by corporation); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Bermuda; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Computer Associates International; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $172,202; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 45; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Bahrain; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Cubic Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $117,054; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 6; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Dell, Inc.[E]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $493,423; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 76; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Barbados (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Panama (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Electronic Data Systems Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $560,767; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 313; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 8; 
Bahrain (1); 
Barbados (2); 
Bermuda (3); 
Panama (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1).

Company name: Exxon Mobil Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $707,283; 
Incorporation location: New Jersey; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 90; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 11; 
Bahamas; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: FedEx Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $214,907; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 75; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 13; 
Antigua (1); 
Bahamas (1); 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Grenada (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (2); 
St. Kitts (1); 
St. Lucia (1); 
Turks & Caicos (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Fluor Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $931,885; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 202; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 27; 
Barbados (5); 
Bermuda (7); 
British Virgin Islands (2); 
Guernsey (8); 
Liechtenstein (2); 
Mauritius (3); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Barbados.

Company name: Ford Motor Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $179,126; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 46; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Cayman Islands; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Foster Wheeler, Ltd.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $286,298; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 92; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 8; 
Bermuda (6); 
Mauritius (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Furniture Brands International, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $112,395; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 9; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Barbados (1); 
Vanuatu (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: GenCorp, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $131,848; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 29; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Bermuda (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: General Dynamics Corporation[F]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $4,928,238; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 26; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 4; 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Cyprus (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: General Motors Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $222,440; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 200; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 13; 
Barbados (3); 
Bermuda (2); 
Cayman Islands (4); 
Mauritius (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 3; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 3; 
Barbados (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (2).

Company name: Goodrich Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $308,283; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 62; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 7; 
Barbados (2); 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Gibraltar (1); 
Mauritius (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 3; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Barbados (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1).

Company name: Halliburton Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $534,177; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 131; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 17; 
Cayman Islands (13); 
Liechtenstein (2); 
Panama (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Harris Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $389,970; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 32; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Health Net, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $944,618; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 2; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Hillenbrand Industries, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $114,456; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 27; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Honeywell International, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $1,442,018; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 3; 
(Subsidiary information provided directly by corporation); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Barbados; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 3; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Barbados.

Company name: International Business Machine Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $498,656; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 98; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 6; 
Bahamas (1); 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (2); 
British Virgin Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: ITT Industries, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $879,772; 
Incorporation location: Indiana; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 142; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Bermuda (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1).

Company name: Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $536,130; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 48; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 5; 
Barbados (1); 
Cyprus (1); 
Panama (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: L-3 Communications Holdings, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $482,248; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 45; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
U.S. Virgin Islands; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 3; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 3; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Lucent Technologies, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $107,402; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 93; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
Cyprus (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: ManTech International Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $291,513; 
Incorporation location: New Jersey; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 15; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Panama; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: McDermott International, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $1,885,243; 
Incorporation location: Panama; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 10; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 9; 
Mauritius (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (1); 
Panama (7); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Northrop Grumman Corporation[G]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $5,636,124; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 52; 
(Subsidiary information provided directly by corporation); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Olin Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $104,121; 
Incorporation location: Virginia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 13; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Bermuda; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Oracle Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $212,468; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 84; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 4; 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Barbados (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Oshkosh Truck Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $566,511; 
Incorporation location: Wisconsin; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 20; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Barbados; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: The Procter & Gamble Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $224,212; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 306; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 6; 
Barbados (2); 
Bermuda (2); 
British Virgin Islands (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Raytheon Company; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $6,123,605; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 95; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 4; 
Bermuda (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (3); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: Rolls-Royce plc; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $327,792; 
Incorporation location: United Kingdom; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 30[H]; 
(Subsidiary information obtained from annual report available on 
corporation's Web site); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Guernsey; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Science Applications International Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $2,654,492; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 15; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Sprint Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $136,200; 
Incorporation location: Kansas; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 56; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Texas Instruments, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $178,631; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 51; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 7; 
Bahamas (1); 
Barbados (3); 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Panama (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 3; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 3; 
Barbados.

Company name: Textron, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $600,533; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 19; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Barbados; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Titan Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $424,087; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 4; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Barbados (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: TRW, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $2,499,816; 
Incorporation location: Ohio; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 33; 
(Subsidiary information provided directly by corporation); 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
Barbados.

Company name: Tyco International, Ltd.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $206,387; 
Incorporation location: Bermuda; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 1,736; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 115; 
Bahamas (8); 
Barbados (17); 
Belize (1); 
Bermuda (55); 
British Virgin Islands (3); 
Cayman Islands (5); 
Cyprus (3); 
Gibraltar (5); 
Isle of Man (1); 
Jersey (2); 
Marshall Islands (8); 
Mauritius (3); 
Panama (2); 
U.S. Virgin Islands (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 1; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 1; 
U.S. Virgin Islands.

Company name: United Technologies Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $3,500,465; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 66; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 4; 
Cayman Islands; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: URS Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $262,489; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 94; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 7; 
Bermuda (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Cyprus (4); 
Panama (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Valero Energy Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $310,202; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 10; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 2; 
Bermuda; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Verizon Communications, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $207,210; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 2; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Bermuda; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: The Wackenhut Corporation[I]; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $356,968; 
Incorporation location: Florida; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 47; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 3; 
Belize (1); 
Panama (2); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Washington Group International; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $531,234; 
Incorporation location: Delaware; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 35; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 1; 
Bermuda; 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: WorldCom, Inc.; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $503,811; 
Incorporation location: Georgia; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 187; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 10; 
Barbados (1); 
Bermuda (3); 
British Virgin Islands (1); 
Cayman Islands (1); 
Panama (4); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 0; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 0.

Company name: Xerox Corporation; 
Federal contract obligations FY 2001 
(dollars in thousands)[A]: $139,224; 
Incorporation location: New York; 
Number of foreign subsidiaries[B]: 216; 
Number and location(s) of foreign subsidiaries in tax havens[B]: 24; 
Aruba (1); 
Barbados (4); 
Bermuda (10); 
Cyprus (1); 
Jersey (1); 
Mauritius (1); 
Netherlands Antilles (3); 
Panama (2); 
Turks & Caicos (1); 
Number of subsidiaries that are Foreign Sales Corporations: 2; 
Number and location(s) of Foreign Sales Corporations in tax havens: 2; 
Barbados. 

Sources: General Services Administration, Securities and Exchange 
Commission, corporate representatives, and GAO Internet research.

[A] Contract obligations include contracts with subsidiaries.

[B] Includes foreign sales corporations.

[C] Formerly Philip Morris Companies, Inc.

[D] Formerly KPMG Consulting, Inc.

[E] Formerly Dell Computer Corporation.

[F] Subsidiary and Foreign Sales Corporation information does not 
include Veridian Corporation (or its subsidiaries), which General 
Dynamics acquired after fiscal year 2001. Information on Veridian 
Corporation and its subsidiaries are presented separately in this 
report.

[G] Subsidiary and Foreign Sales Corporation information does not 
include Newport News Shipbuilding or TRW, Inc. (or their subsidiaries), 
which Northrop Grumman acquired after fiscal year 2001. Information on 
Newport News Shipbuilding and TRW, Inc., and their subsidiaries are 
presented separately in this report.

[H] Rolls-Royce, plc also participates in 20 foreign joint ventures, 
includingONE JOINT VENTURE INCORPORATED in the tax haven country of 
Isle of Man.

[I] Acquired by Group 4 Falck (Denmark) in May 2002; does not include 
Wackenhut Corrections Corporation (or its subsidiaries), which is now 
an independent corporation.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

James R. White, (202) 512-9110 Ralph T. Block, (415) 904-2150: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individuals above, Jeff Arkin, Amy Friedheim, 
Shirley Jones, Amy Rosewarne, and Jennifer Wong made key contributions 
to this report.

(450245): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] A survey of studies that examine income shifting by multinational 
corporations appears in Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax 
Policy, The Deferral of Income Earned Through U.S. Controlled Foreign 
Corporations (Washington, D.C.: December 2000), 197-213.

[2] U.S. General Accounting Office, Information on Federal Contractors 
That Are Incorporated Offshore, GAO-03-194R (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 1, 
2002). The term "tax haven" is generally used in research and the media 
to refer to countries that have no or nominal taxes. In this report, 
the term "tax haven country" includes various possessions and overseas 
territories of the United States and other countries. For an expanded 
discussion of tax havens, see appendices I and II. For a list of the 
100 largest publicly traded federal contractors in fiscal year 2001, 
see appendix. III. 

[3] Public corporations may omit information in their SEC filings on 
subsidiaries which, when considered in the aggregate, would not 
constitute a significant subsidiary, and on consolidated wholly owned 
multiple subsidiaries carrying on the same line of business (such as 
chain stores). 

[4] Under the U.S. foreign tax credit system, corporations generally 
can reduce the U.S. tax on income earned from foreign operations by the 
amount of the income and withholding taxes they pay on this income in 
the country where it is earned. 

[5] Certain income of a U.S. corporation's foreign subsidiary, such as 
passive, investment-type income is subject to U.S. tax without regard 
to whether the income is repatriated to the U.S. parent.

[6] Even when the U.S. corporate tax rate is lower than that of another 
country, intercompany pricing abuses can occur by shifting income 
through another related company that operates in a low-tax country.

[7] The United States replaced the DISC benefit with the FSC provisions 
after a General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) panel ruled that 
the DISC benefit was a prohibited export subsidy.

[8] Foreign Sales Corporation data in this report are from IRS' 
Statistics of Income division estimates. GAO did not verify these data.

[9] P.L. 106-519.

[10] Although the United States designed the FSC provisions to comply 
with GATT, in 1999 the World Trade Organization (WTO), which supplanted 
GATT in 1995, concluded that the FSC provisions constituted a 
prohibited export subsidy. Likewise, although the ETI benefit was 
designed to comply with WTO rules, the WTO ruled in 2001 that the ETI 
provisions constitute an illegal export subsidy, and has since approved 
the European Union's request to assess up to $4 billion in sanctions 
against the United States. The European Union has stated that they will 
begin to impose sanctions beginning March 1, 2004, if the United States 
fails to comply with the WTO ruling. Congress is currently considering 
a number of proposals intended to replace the ETI provisions with 
alternative tax benefits.

[11] A corporation may be required to disclose if a subsidiary is a 
Foreign Sales Corporation if that information is material under federal 
securities laws.

[12] In Exhibit 21, public corporations are required to list their 
subsidiaries and the names under which they do business, and their 
state or jurisdiction of incorporation or organization.

[13] 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.

[14] Form S-1 is a Registration Statement corporations file with the 
SEC according to the Securities Act of 1933. 

[15] Form 20-F is used as the Registration Statement, Annual Report, or 
Transition Report that foreign corporations file with the SEC according 
to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. 

[16] In this case, the SEC defines such income as income from 
continuing operations before income taxes, extraordinary items, and the 
cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle. 

[17] A corporation may be required to disclose if a subsidiary is a 
Foreign Sales Corporation if that information is material under federal 
securities laws.

[18] We did include information on additional subsidiaries that TRW, 
Inc. did not report in its Exhibit 21 filing, which we obtained during 
the course of communication with TRW, Inc.'s corporate parent, Northrop 
Grumman Corporation (another of the 100 largest publicly traded federal 
contractors; see app. IV).

[19] The OECD has identified two types of tax haven countries-the 34 
countries that have made commitments to cooperate with the OECD in 
addressing "harmful tax practices" by December 31, 2005, and the 5 
countries that have not made such commitments (Andorra, Liberia, The 
Principality of Liechtenstein, The Republic of the Marshall Islands, 
and the Principality of Monaco). The commitments are to transparency 
and effective exchange of information. 

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