Updated July 2014
America's corporate income tax is one of the most poorly understood aspects of the nation's tax system. With the constant rumblings emanating from Washington about a revamping of the corporate tax system, I thought that it was a good time for a background look at the history of the current system.
America's corporate income tax is one of the most poorly understood aspects of the nation's tax system. With the constant rumblings emanating from Washington about a revamping of the corporate tax system, I thought that it was a good time for a background look at the history of the current system.
While stumbling around the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis economic data website (also known as FRED), I found this rather interesting graph showing the
ratio between federal tax receipts on corporate income and corporate after tax
profits:
Back in 1951, the
aforementioned ratio of corporate income tax receipts to corporate after tax
profits peaked at 95.2 percent. This dropped steadily, hitting a six
decade low of 16.7 percent in 2009. For 2011, the ratio stood at 19.97
percent, the second lowest ratio in the past sixty-two years. The
current ratio is also well below the 62 year average of 47.5 percent. This got me to thinking about the history of corporate taxes and their importance in the overall scheme of taxation in the United States.
Corporate taxes have been around for
more than a century. The first corporate taxes were enacted by Congress
in 1909 at a rate of 1 percent on all corporate
income. This rose to 12.5 percent a decade later and hit a peak rate of
52.8 percent during the 1960s and further cut to 34 percent by the Tax Reform
Act of 1986. In 1993, the top corporate rate was raised to 35 percent,
however, as we know, this "headline rate" is paid by very few major
American corporations, many of whom hold overseas assets. Unlike
individuals who pay tax on gross income, corporations (remember, they are
people too!) pay taxes on net income or profits. Corporations are allowed
to deduct just about every cost of doing business from their incomes.
Here is a graph showing the history of
corporate tax remittances as a percentage of GDP:
As a percentage of the entire
economy, corporate taxes peaked at 7.1 percent in 1945 when surtaxes on
corporate income were added for excessive war profits during World War II.
Between the mid-1940s and the early 1980s, corporate taxes as a share of
the economy dropped slowly, hitting a low of 1.0 percent in 1983. Since
then, corporate taxes have ranged between 1 percent and just over 2 percent of the
economy, quite a bit lower than the levels seen during the 1950s and
1960s.
By way of comparison, here is a look
at the share of individual income taxes as a percentage of the entire economy:
In contrast to federal corporate tax
remittances, the share of individual income taxes as a percentage of GDP has
remained quite stable at around 8 percent of the economy since the middle of
World War II.
Here is a graph showing how the
share of corporate taxes as a percentage of total federal receipts has changed since the
end of World War II:
During the 1950s, corporate income
tax revenue provided around 30 percent of Washington's total revenue. This
began to drop during the 1960s and 1970s, in part, because Congress cut the top
corporate tax rate from 52.8 percent in 1969 to 46 percent in 1979 on top of
changes to tax laws that allowed accelerated depreciation for capital
expenditures. By 1982, corporate taxes were only making up 7.9 percent of
Washington's total receipts. Over the past three and a half decades,
corporate taxes have contributed between 8.0 percent and 15.6 percent of
federal government receipts. In 2013, corporate taxes made up only 10.8 percent of total federal receipts.
In contrast, here's what has
happened to personal income tax revenue as a percentage of total federal tax
receipts since 1947:
Basically, since World War II, taxes
on individuals have contributed an average of 43.7 percent of Washington's
total revenue, ranging from a low of 35.7 percent in 1950 to a high of 48
percent in 1970. In 2013, individual taxes made up 42.2 percent of
Washington's revenue, nearly four times the contribution made by Corporate
America which made total after tax profits of $1.9045
trillion in the fourth quarter of 2013, a new record.
If you should happen to think that Washington may be able to increase revenues through increased corporate taxation, you might want to rethink that. Unfortunately for individuals, a 2009 study by the Tax Foundation found that states that have higher levels of corporate taxation have lower wages for workers. A one percent increase in the average tax rate led to a 0.014 percent decrease in real wages or a $2.50 wage loss for every one dollar increase in corporate income taxes over a five year period. This means that the burden of corporate income taxes falls predominantly on labor since tax increases are generally not transferred to consumers because of price competition.
Either way, it looks like Main Street loses at the expense of Corporate America.
Beyond the fact that corporations already own the political process due to moneys influence during the campaign to get elected what is their end game by holding onto the insane amounts of money pooling in their bank accounts?
ReplyDeleteKeeping it from the taxman?
ReplyDeleteIt is long been happening that the individual tax base is shrinking, which is of course the source of the bulk of government revenues. Therefore, there is a concerted effort to raise the wage scale to stem this shrinkage, however, I don't believe there will be enough domestic corporate revenue to support this, and the many that would receive any such increase already are in the forty something percent that don't pay any federal tax.
ReplyDeleteErroneous analysis.
ReplyDeleteYou have to concurrently analyze the tax law changes over time.
For example, during the Carter years, to stimulate the economy, the Investment Tax Credit [ITC] was implemented. This allowed business to deduct off the bottom line, before tax.
In reality only individuals pay tax.