The definition of a corporation
is an organized form of business in which the ownership of the business
is held by stockholders, or shareholders-individuals who have purchased
ownership shares in the business. The corporation is organized with a
board of directors and officers. The board of directors is elected to
make the business decisions that affect the overall business condition
and financial health of the business. Officers are elected to oversee
the day-to-day operations of the business. The corporation exists as a
legal entity in and of itself. Today, the latest proposal is to relieve
this legal entity of its tax liability. Let’s take a look at
the different tax structures of the corporations, and how this proposal
will affect our corporate community.
One of the greatest advantages to operating
your business as a C Corporation is concerned with the liability of the
individual shareholders. When you purchase stock in a corporation, you
are only liable to the extent of your investment; nothing further. This
is a true fact, unless there is a situation where the corporate
“veil” is pierced. Then the liability of the
shareholders guilty of piercing the veil will be questioned. What does
this term “piercing the corporate veil” mean? It
means you do not keep your personal finances separate from the
corporation’s finances. It looks like the guilty shareholder
is using the corporation in personal ways, and this increases the
liability of the shareholder in question.
The great disadvantage
is the “double taxation” of profits. Any profits
shown by the corporation are taxed, and then any dividends paid to
investors, are also taxed. The corporation receives no tax deduction
for profits distributed to investors in the form of dividends,
therefore there is a situation created for double taxation: the
corporation is taxed on the profits, and when those profits are
distributed to shareholders, they are taxed again. However, this is
just a casualty of the situation: if you wish to have the business
entity treated as a separate legal entity, it must also be treated as a
separate taxable entity.
The situation created by the formation and
operation of an S Corporation differs from that of a C Corporation, in
that net profit and net losses are flowed through to the shareholders,
via a K-1. Generally, S Corporations are formed by small businesses or
family owned situations when there is a need for liability protection,
but the business is not large enough to support the operating
conditions of a C Corporation. This is a better tax situation for the
small business owner, but does not relieve them entirely of tax
liability.
However,
the current tax system imposed on corporations by the U.S. government
is at best, a biased system; for corporations that have a net profit,
taxes on those profits amount to a full one-third. So, if
you’re doing business as a standard “C”
corporation, and you do manage to make a profit, you’re going
to owe Uncle Sam about 30%. That’s an amazing figure, so
let’s look at some of the behind-the-scenes information that
will help to enlighten us as to the “why” so much
tax should be levied.
The first thing you must understand when
dealing with the corporate tax structure, is that for the most part,
many large corporations do not pay the complete 30% tax that would
typically be levied against an individual if they were in the same
situation; corporate accountants and the sheer process by which
corporations must report their income, expenses, deductions,
depreciation, dividends, and any other financial transactions allows
for huge deductions that typically offset any tax due. This concept is
a major topic of discussion today, as we attempt to better control and
regulate corporate accountability of their finances.
The latest proposals
have been to eliminate the corporate tax altogether. This would shift
the tax burden to the individuals of this country; that is a tremendous
shift from the post-war era of the Second World War, when corporations
and individuals shared the responsibility almost equally. Thanks to the
lobbying done by corporate lobbyists over the last thirty years,
we’ve finally reached the point of no return. The latest
proposals have come from within the halls of Congress to eliminate
corporate tax, and let the average taxpayer assume all the
responsibility.
When
you factor in the ability of the wealthy and the corporate entities of
this country to hire brilliant accountants that find loopholes in the
tax system, and relieve their clients entirely of their tax liability,
you cannot believe that the current system operates for the people, by
the people, can you?