• Bassman1805@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Company receives $1 donation. Company donates $1 to charity. Company writes $1 off of their income for the year.

    It comes out net-zero, this is a stupid thing for people to get upset about.

    • usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      Yeah, my question was more rhetorical. There is no tax break really, they don’t pay tax on the donation because it’s not income

    • KoboldCoterie@pawb.social
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      7 months ago

      However, a not stupid thing for people to get upset about is what CVS did a couple years ago. Basically, they pledged to donate $10M to a charity, then collected donations from customers, and put those donations towards that pre-existing pledge.

      To illustrate why this is shitty (in the event that someone misses the point):

      CVS pledged to donate $10M. Effectively from that point, they were giving the charity $10M regardless of what else happened. At that moment, CVS was spending $10M and the charity was gaining $10M. CVS then asked for donations from customers, stating that the donations would be going towards that charity.

      If they collected (for example) $1M in donations, they would cover the remaining $9M, so the charity gets their $10M, so what’s the problem?

      The problem is that the customers weren’t donating to the charity; they were donating to CVS. In the end, the charity didn’t get any more money than they would have without those customers’ donations; CVS paid less, instead.

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Kind of. They’re still claiming a PR thing, but that’s probably worth looking past to benefit the charity.

      They’re absolutely not getting any kind of tax break from these.