[identity profile] badlydrawnjeff.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] talkpolitics
Today, President Obama unveiled his latest plan to reform the corporate tax structure. I'm not too curious about the community's thoughts on this overall since I'm fairly sure we all know where we all sit on Obama making good/bad choices here, but I do have a more general question:

Why have a corporate tax rate at all?

I'd like to think we all agree on these basic points:

a) The corporate tax rate is not really paid by the corporation or business in question. Taxes are simply another cost that is levied on a company, a cost recouped through fewer services, lower wages/employment, higher prices, or some combination therein. It's not an issue of "fair share," really, since we're all paying it.

b) Our corporate tax rate is comparatively high when stacked up against other nations. We're #1 in the OECD at 35%. Canada, directly to our north, is at 15%. And that's without factoring in the corporate tax rates of individual states. Whether you think this matters much is up to you.

c) We only tax profits, and that's proper: If a company doesn't make a profit, it's not paying that tax rate. It's one reason why many corporations don't end up having a tax obligation.

d) We offer a lot of tax credits and opportunities to lower the effective rate: From green energy tax credits to employment credits, even profitable companies are able to reduce their effective rate to zero - or lower.

e) Corporate taxes account for a fairly small amount of overall receipts: Well under $250b in 2010.

So the question I pose is this - if you're in favor of a corporate tax at all, why? Is it worth it given what we all know and agree on? Is the value of getting $220b in revenue from the corporations worth it?

(no subject)

Date: 22/2/12 23:26 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pastorlenny.livejournal.com
The first point is absurd. That's like saying corporations don't pay salaries because, hey, it just passes along those costs in the form of prices.

Really, people should work for free -- because corporations produce things we all need!

(no subject)

Date: 22/2/12 23:28 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fizzyland.livejournal.com
Companies in the United States pay almost half the taxes that companies in other rich countries pay

I think we're done here and if you disagree I will have to refer to you as a "lunatic" that refuses to take an "adult" approach to the issue of taxes.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 00:22 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] soliloquy76.livejournal.com
I could get on board with no federal taxes for corporations, but only if corporations lose their influence in electoral politics. That means zero influence in political campaigns, either monetary or otherwise. No funneling money through individuals or SuperPACs and no funding of advertisements. Any corporation caught doing this would either be fined or lose their tax exemption.

Lobbying would still be OK, though.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 01:54 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dwer.livejournal.com
I'd like to think we all agree on these basic points:

Yes, I'm sure you would.

Tell ya what. Reverse Citizens United, and I'd be in favor of a reimbursement of all federal taxes to corporations that keep 90% of their employees and 100% of their manufacturing within US borders.

But first you'd have to write, 3000 times, "Corporations are not people. I will not seek to pretend that Pepsi has First Amendment rights."
Edited Date: 23/2/12 04:20 (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 02:10 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chron-job.livejournal.com
From a user fee based view, being a corporation has some benefit (else why isn't everything a partnership or solely owned proprietorship?) yet has some administrative costs. At the very VERY least, there should be some way to fund the administrative and criminal policing costs that are created by the existence of corporations.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 02:35 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oslo.livejournal.com
The corporate tax rate is not really paid by the corporation or business in question. Taxes are simply another cost that is levied on a company, a cost recouped through fewer services, lower wages/employment, higher prices, or some combination therein. It's not an issue of "fair share," really, since we're all paying it.

As [livejournal.com profile] pastorlenny pointed out, this is true of any cost of business, so it doesn't cut either way.

Our corporate tax rate is comparatively high when stacked up against other nations. We're #1 in the OECD at 35%. Canada, directly to our north, is at 15%. And that's without factoring in the corporate tax rates of individual states.

You're also not factoring in the deductions and exemptions that bring that effective rate back down. Taking those into account, we're much closer to what is typical, though still on the higher end.

We only tax profits, and that's proper.

Sure. But this doesn't cut either way.

We offer a lot of tax credits and opportunities to lower the effective rate.

We probably should offer fewer of these and make those that remain smarter and more narrowly focused on providing "bang for the buck," so to speak. Kind of like what Obama's proposing.

Corporate taxes account for a fairly small amount of overall receipts.

The amount they pay could probably be higher if we clamp down on evasion. And $225 billion is still about 9.7% of gross receipts, the third largest share of the categories named in the link you've provided.

So the question I pose is this - if you're in favor of a corporate tax at all, why? Is it worth it given what we all know and agree on? Is the value of getting $220b in revenue from the corporations worth it?

Strangely, none of your points address anything having to do with anything that might be relevant to these questions. Is it worth it? I don't know, do we spend more than $225 billion collecting them? If not, then it does seem to be "worth it," at least fiscally speaking. It's a sizable chunk of revenue. And if we, as individuals, are just paying the taxes indirectly, then what difference does it make whether we pay them as individuals or via corporate taxes?

Basically, you've provided plenty of reasons for Obama's plan. You say: corporate taxes are high relative to the rest of the world; they'd be even higher if we didn't have so many complicated deductions and exemptions; and we don't get as much in receipts as we could. Hence: Obama's plan, and not Congressional Republicans, who want to cut the nominal rate even lower and keep all of the complexity of the code.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 02:53 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kylinrouge.livejournal.com
We're locked in a system. You can't cut taxes in a vacuum. $250b less in taxes is $250b less in what those taxes pay for. I hear the response is always 'cut', when when I ask what it's 'entitlements'. No thanks.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 02:53 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] oslo.livejournal.com
As for a positive argument in favor of corporate taxation - as an initial matter, I have to say that I find a lot of appeal in eliminating the whole "double taxation" issue and having individuals paying a single, direct rate, that can then give them a more transparent picture of what they're getting for their tax dollars.

The problem with this argument and its reliance on the "double taxation" concept is that eliminating the "double tax" results in this kind of transparency only if you either (i) have a direct flow-through of profits from corporations to shareholders and/or (ii) shareholders pay income tax on the capital gain they realize when they sell their stock.

To see this, imagine what happens in a world where corporations aren't taxed on their profits. Do they make timely dividend payments to their shareholders that can then be taxed? No, of course not. The Board retains that value. That results in an increase to enterprise and shareholder value, which isn't taxed, that likely would correspond to a higher sale price for shares in the corporation. If the shareholders then sell their shares, they would receive a capital gain on the price they originally paid, which would be taxed at a preferential rate in our system. So, they're basically avoiding income tax by converting it into capital gain. Note that, for public securities, the conversion becomes even easier - it'd be like a piggy bank. You buy stock for $100 today; a year from now the company has $10 attributable to your stock in profits that they retain; your stock becomes worth $110; you sell that stock and then buy $100 worth of stock. Then you have $10 of income and $100 stock, but you pay only capital gains on your "investment."

Now, I understand that you think that capital investment is so valuable that we ought to tax it at a preferential rate (though this has never been explained to me adequately), but the question is, here, whether we ought to recognize that $10 profit, which derives from income to the company - i.e., the difference between the cost of producing a product or service and the price received for selling it and not from capital appreciation - as a "capital gain" worthy of such a preferential rate.

Basically, it's tax structuring on the cheap. My clients are always looking for this kind of result - zeroing out corporate taxes would make it available to everyone.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 04:28 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-rukh.livejournal.com
Specifically, C is the reason why corporate taxes are valid.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 05:57 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] usekh.livejournal.com
If you want corporations to be considered people, then shouldn't they have to pay taxes?

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 06:34 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] musicpsych.livejournal.com
Corporations benefit from a variety of government programs, from infrastructure to education of the citizenry, even national defense and safety regulations. I know it's kind of lame to say, "give us money for these services we are assuming you are benefiting from," but why shouldn't they bear some of the cost? That's kind of what happens currently to taxes on citizens - my taxes go to public school funds, even though I don't have kids, and my taxes pay for the fire department, even though I've never had to use their services.

I know you said that $220b is a small number, but if you wanted to cut that, what would you put in its place so that the deficit wouldn't be even bigger? I dislike arguments saying that the money is too small to worry about, since even small figures add up. Would individual income tax rates have to be raised to make up for it?

I dislike point d. You are right, companies are able to reduce their effective rate to zero, but that to me is an argument to get rid of those tax credits.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 12:55 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blueduck37.livejournal.com
I think we should only tax poor people.

No person making a quarter million $ or more should ever be taxed, as they are too precious.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 13:21 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eracerhead.livejournal.com
Since corporate entities reap the benefits paid for by the taxpayer, they should also play a part in paying for it. Case in point: all the laws being passed to enforce copyright. This costs money. Why should an individual artist pay for it through taxation but not Time-Warner?

This idea that taxation is just a black hole that provides no value is faulty. Corporations need to pay for these services as well.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 16:35 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] enders-shadow.livejournal.com
If I never shop at Wal-Mart, I never pay Wal-Mart's taxes.
That is at least one reason that A) is foolish.

The rest of your reasons are nonsense as well.

B) is whatever. I have no problem with the highest corporate tax being at 35%. As you note, in point C) that we only tax profits, I'm sure we are not taxing everybody at 35%. D) supports this too, 35% is only the TOP tax rate.

As for E) how about you just cough up $250B to replace the $250B we get from corporations?
It's absurd to claim: "this isn't that much money!" meanwhile NPR and the teachers unions get blamed for the trillion dollar deficit....

So yes, tax the corporations. Tax anybody or anything who has profits in the BILLIONS.

And again, I don't pay wal-mart no fucking money, so I sure as shit ain't paying their tax bill.

And as people point out above: ALL corporations have a cost of doing business. We aren't touching that. We are only taking a cut from the PROFITS. That is, after costs are COVERED and businesses have ALREADY PAID their employees (hence, no need to lower wages)

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 16:50 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] squidb0i.livejournal.com
Yes, because we can then use that 220billion to maintain the infrastructure and services that make corporations, profits, jobs, and society itself possible.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 17:05 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sophia-sadek.livejournal.com
I oppose corporate taxation because it prevents foreign investors from profiting as much as they possibly could from the work of Americans.

(no subject)

Date: 23/2/12 18:02 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nevermind6794.livejournal.com
On a rough gradient from philosophical to practical:

a.) Because whenever money is transferred between legal entities (not people) in exchange for goods and services, and there is a resulting profit, it should generally be taxed.

b.) Because corporations are legal entities with bank accounts independent of other stakeholders (employees, customers, local people), and consequently benefit from public investments. Thus they should bear some of those costs.

c.) Because if corporations aren't taxed, they can hoard money (and increase stock prices, oddly enough, a la Apple) and create another sort of Gilded Age. We need money to flow for our economy to work properly.

d.) Because that's where the money is.