The point is:
You invest in funds that invest in companies that use transfer pricing to minimize taxes.
You could say you don't want to be invested by not investing in mutual funds/ETFs etc.
But, almost every American with savings does invest and is the direct beneficiary of transfer pricing.
You and others could decide to allocate a portion of your capital gains back to the UK government as a gift, but I think that is "very, very unlikely".
[Also] One strategy could be to only choose small cap names, then you are unlikely to hear of any of the "evil" things the corporations you own are doing... Obviously that would create problems with risk in your portfolio.
You could say you don't want to be invested by not investing in mutual funds/ETFs etc.
But, almost every American with savings does invest and is the direct beneficiary of transfer pricing.
You and others could decide to allocate a portion of your capital gains back to the UK government as a gift, but I think that is "very, very unlikely".
[Also] One strategy could be to only choose small cap names, then you are unlikely to hear of any of the "evil" things the corporations you own are doing... Obviously that would create problems with risk in your portfolio.