After Trump gave PepsiCo a massive tax cut, the company paid out billions of dollars to their wealthy shareholders and took advantage of the tax law to lay off workers and replace them with machines. Trump promised his tax law would benefit working Americans, but that never happened. Here’s the four-step process to taking advantage of a broken Trump promise:
Step 1: PepsiCo got a massive tax break as a result of Trump’s corporate tax cut.
Forbes: “Along with lower cost due to the refranchising initiatives, the implementation of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would help PepsiCo reduce its tax expense for the year, which would, in turn, translate into higher profit.”
Step 2: PepsiCo announced billions of dollars in payouts to wealthy shareholders.
2019: PEPSICO CFO Hugh F. Johnston: “We expect total cash returns to shareholders of approximately $8 billion in 2019, comprised of dividends of approximately $5 billion and share repurchases of approximately $3 billion.”
2018: Market Insider: “In addition, the company raised its annualized dividend by 15 percent and announced a new share repurchase program of up to $15 billion.”
Step 3: Trump’s tax law incentivized companies to increase automation and replace workers with machines.
Washington Post: “The authors attribute this finding in part to the effects of automation: The tax break made it cheaper for companies to invest in equipment, such as automated checkout machines, that replaces workers.”
Step 4: PepsiCo took advantage of its earnings gained through Trump’s tax law and invested in automation while laying off workers.
Pepsi President Laguarta: “Our productivity programs will be guided by a set of universally applied principles, namely: achieving local affordability; simplifying and standardizing processes; collaborating across functions rather than optimizing within functions to achieve lowest cost end-to-end processes; relentlessly automating and merging the best of our optimized business models with the best new thinking and technologies.”
CNBC: “To be sure, as PepsiCo eyes further marketing and advertising spend, it also plans to balance those investments with a cost-savings program that aims to slash at least $1 billion every year through 2023. The program is an extension of a prior savings plan that was expected to end after 2019. Johnston told CNBC that there will be layoffs in jobs that can be automated but did not provide details on how many.”