I’m not sure what it says about me, but diving into the tax minimization strategies of Dodger contract structuring is making for great entertainment! Someone posted it earlier, but it looks like cash comp that is deferred for 10 yrs kicks it into being taxed in the state of residence at the time the deferred comp is received. So this would save Shohei about $90m in taxes, assuming he relocated post-retirement. It looks like they also did this with Mookie, btw, deferring $115m of his deal. Interestingly, Mookie’s deal also included $75m of signing bonuses, which helps Mookie because he is a TN resident (no state income tax) and signing bonuses are taxed in the home state and not state where games are played. Shohei is a CA resident, so this wouldn’t help him and unsurprisingly no such signing bonuses are included in his contract. All of which leads me to believe that for all the talk of keeping the Dodgers competitive, this is just a savvy tax minimization strategy that the Dodgers have structured to basically have the state of CA subsidize the contract.
Given that Shohei is not a US citizen, it really gets interesting if there is some way for the Dodgers to make the deferred payments to him in Monaco or whatever his tax haven of choice is that would be classified as non-US income. Then you’re talking $275m plus the $90m saved from CA.