The purpose
of a corporation is to generate profits for owners (all other functions
are secondary to this goal). Public corporations distribute these
profits through dividends. But as a result of America's system of
double taxation, where income is taxed on the corporate level and
then again on the personal level, government receives a much bigger
share of corporate income than the owners themselves. I also address
this topic in my
latest video blog.
Suppose a publicly
held U.S. corporation made one million dollars in income over the
course of a year. Currently its profits would be taxed at a 35%
level (for the purpose of this example I will not factor in the
lower rate that is applied to its first $100K of profits), meaning
that the company would have to pay $350,000 directly to the government
(assuming it earned its income without special tax breaks). Of the
$650,000 that remained, the typical dividend-paying corporation
might distribute 40 percent to shareholders (this is known as the
"payout ratio" and the actual average is slightly below
40%). So in this instance the company would pay $260,000 (40% of
$650,000) to shareholders. The remaining $390,000 would typically
be held as "retained earnings," and would be used to maintain
and replace depreciating equipment, make capital investments, fund
research and development, and expand operations. If the company
did not make such investments it would be impossible for it to survive
and its ability to perpetuate profit distributions would be limited.
These retained
earnings still represent assets to shareholders, but their primary
purpose is to generate future profits and higher dividends. However,
shareholders do not directly benefit from those retained earnings
until future distributions are paid. Sure they can sell their shares
at a gain, paying a capital gains tax in the process, but this merely
transfers those deferred benefits to the new buyer.
When received
by shareholders, the $260,000 in dividends are taxed again at a
rate of 15 percent (according to current law). As a result, shareholders
receive just $221,000 of the million dollar profit. The $39,000
in dividend taxes are added to the $350,000 "off the top"
corporate tax to bring the government's total take of the company's
profits to just a shade under $390,000. In other words the government
gets about 75% more cash flow from the company than the actual owners.
Looked at in a slightly different way, the government gets about
65% of the non-retained earnings while shareholders, who put up
the money and take all the risk, get 35%. Does this seem fair?
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This level
of taxation puts American corporations at a noticeable disadvantage
vis-à-vis companies in the countries against which we are
most keenly competing. In China, the slicing of the pie is much
more favorable to owners. There, corporations are taxed at a rate
of 25% and dividends at 10%. Using these numbers (and the same payout
ratio used for the US corporation), the Chinese government gets
51% of distributed corporate profits and shareholders get 49%. In
Hong Kong (which is part of Communist China), the situation is even
better. There, the corporate tax rate is 16% and the personal dividend
rate is zero. If you do the math there, the government gets 33%
and the shareholders get 67%.
This comparison
raises an interesting point. If shareholders in communist China
are allowed to keep more of their earnings than shareholders in
capitalist America, which nation is more communist and which more
capitalist?
Late last month
the Obama Administration and Mitt Romney offered competing proposals
on corporate tax reform that both politicians say would make US
corporations more competitive. Romney's plan lowers the corporate
tax rate to 25% while maintaining the dividend tax at 15%. This
makes things slightly better, sending 54% of distributed earnings
to the government and 46% to shareholders (not quite as generous
as Communist China). Not surprisingly however the Obama plan will
make things much more difficult.
Although the
President proposes lowering the corporate tax rate to 28% he also
wants to scrap the dividend tax and instead tax the distributions
as ordinary income. In practice, the vast majority of individual
recipients of dividends fall into the higher end of the income spectrum.
Which means a very large chunk of these dividends will be taxed
at the highest personal rate of 39%. But Obama also wants to subject
these high earners to a surtax to pay for his health care initiative,
which means that many of the recipients will be taxed at a rate
of 44% (this also accounts for the phase out of personal deductions
for higher earners!) So for these high-income earners, using our
current example, the new distribution split with the government
under Obama's proposals will be about 70/30 in favor of the government.
This is actually worse than the status quo.
But it's actually
much worse than that. The corporate income tax is just one of the
veins that corporations open for government. Think about all the
other taxes that corporations pay, such as the payroll taxes and
sales taxes. Sure they pass those taxes on to their employees and
customers, but the revenue flows 100% to the government with shareholders
getting nothing but a bill for the cost of collection.
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Then there
are all of the taxes paid directly by the employees themselves on
their wages and salaries. Sure, this money belongs to employees
and not shareholders, but if not for the profit-making activities
of corporations, those wages and salaries, and resulting taxes,
could not have been paid. And while employees derive benefits from
those after tax distributions too, shareholders get nothing. When
all of these channels are factored in, think about how much more
the government derives in taxes from corporate activity than its
owners receive in dividends. Who knows how high this figure is,
but I'm sure the government's take is many multiples of what shareholders
receive.
Back in the
19th Century, America really was a capitalist country. We had no
corporate tax and no personal income tax. Shareholders got 100%
of distributed corporate income. As a result of this structure,
US corporations grew rapidly and helped spark the fastest economic
expansion the world had ever seen. But that was then, this is now.
Given the current
numbers, even if our leaders were dyed-in-the-wool Marxists, what
would be their motivation to nationalize Fortune 500 companies?
If they already receive the lion's share of profit distributions,
what would be the point? Such a move risks upsetting the management
structures and destroying the remaining profit motive. It would
risk killing the goose that lays the golden egg. If government nationalized
a company, it would also have to manage it. Does anyone think bureaucrats
would make better decisions than private owners? What's worse, if
those decisions produced losses rather than profits, the government
would have to absorb them. Under the current systems, the government
gets the lion's share of the profits, but private shareholders are
stuck with 100% of the losses.
There is actually
a name for our present system: fascism. While fascism and communism
are both forms of socialism, at least the fascists are smart enough
to know that if the means of production are nationalized, employees
and owners won't work as hard, and the government will lose revenue.
It's a shame
that the country that was once the beacon of freedom and economic
liberty no longer has the ability to recognize what capitalism actually
looks like. Unless corporate owners are appropriately rewarded for
their risks, US corporations will not regain their lost dominance,
Americans will not regain their lost liberty, and our standard of
living will continue to fall. As it stands now, the United States
has become a people of the government, by the government and, most
importantly, for the government.
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