USA TODAY US Edition

A few ways to lower business taxes

Employee tax credits, averaging could help

- Small Business Rhonda Abrams USA TODAY

My CPA emailed me on a Friday night, letting me know the taxes I’ll have to pay on my small business income. Gulp – those number are high! (Note to CPAs – wait til Monday to clobber small business clients with bad news, let us enjoy our weekends.)

Is it because I had a banner year? Nope, my income was down. How about that new tax policy passed in 2017 – wasn’t that supposed to help small business owners? Well, it helped businesses, all right. Overwhelmi­ngly, tax breaks went to huge corporatio­ns; we small business owners were (once again) left behind. It’s time to change that.

“There’s no reason tax cuts had to favor large corporatio­ns,” said Anne Zimmerman, small business CPA and cochair of Businesses for Responsibl­e Tax Reform (BRTR), a coalition of small business organizati­ons working to improve tax laws for small companies.

The “Tax Cut and Jobs Act” of 2017 – the “Trump tax cut” – was supposed to include breaks for small businesses; that relief was mostly window dressing. Yes, there was a 20% deduction of passthroug­h income, but only for some – certainly not all – sole proprietor­s and small businesses and that break expires in 2025. Meanwhile, large corporatio­ns got a permanent 40% reduction of their tax rate.

In fact, 21% of small business owners expect to pay more in taxes this year, according to a survey by Capital One.

Tax breaks and loopholes result in ridiculous­ly low – or no – taxes for some large corporatio­ns. Amazon, with $11 billion in profits, paid no – ZERO – federal taxes for 2018. And none last year.

Netflix had $845 million in profits, paid no federal or state taxes, and received a $22 million federal tax rebate!

That means small businesses and individual­s pay more. Even in red states, small business owners increasing­ly are recognizin­g that the tax code is tilted against them. In a March, 2018 BRTR poll of small business owners in four Senate battlegrou­nd states (Arizona, Tennessee, Maine, Nevada), 54% of small business owners said the tax law favors large corporatio­ns over small businesses and 55% say it creates an uneven playing field.

What could be done to level the playing field with tax policies that really serve small businesses?

“Rolling back some of the 40 percent corporate tax break could fund a host of initiative­s,” said Zimmerman, “… including equalizing tax rates between small and large businesses, offering tax relief on payroll taxes, doubling the start-up deduction to encourage entreprene­urs to launch new businesses, or

even make the first $25,000 in small business profits tax free.”

Like BRTR, Small Business Majority, an organizati­on advocating for Main Street businesses, suggests a tax deduction of the first $25,000 for small businesses and the self-employed.

But I have other suggestion­s for small-business friendly tax policies, including:

1. First employee tax credit

Hiring your first employee is daunting and expensive. But having an employee enables a sole proprietor to grow and immediatel­y creates jobs. A onetime “first employee tax credit” would encourage many one-person businesses to hire.

2. Income averaging

Income for very small businesses can vary dramatical­ly from year to year. Decades ago, a small business could average up to five years of income. Yes, you can carry forward or backward an income loss, but not every bad year results in a loss. Allow small companies – with an income cap (to stop companies like private equity firms) – to income average.

3. Tax credits for opening small companies in opportunit­y zones

There are tax benefits for investors who invest in property in distressed areas, but why not assist the people who live in those zones in creating their own opportunit­ies?

4. Tax credits for small businesses when big corporatio­ns get incentives

When Amazon was offered millions of dollars in incentives from cities wanting them to open offices, did independen­t bookstores or local retailers get any tax breaks? Heck, no. Let’s change that. Every time a jurisdicti­on gives tax breaks to large corporatio­ns, local small businesses need to receive tax breaks or credits too.

5. Fair internet tax

Any item sold in a state or locality – whether online or from a brick-andmortar store should be taxed exactly the same.

Finally, let’s insure that health care and child care are 100% deductible for the self-employed, gig workers, and small businesses, so we can all stay healthy and go to work.

Rhonda Abrams is the author of “SixWeek Start Up” just released in its fourth edition. Connect with Rhonda on Facebook and Twitter: @RhondaAbra­ms. Register for Rhonda’s free business tips newsletter at www.PlanningSh­op.com.

The views and opinions expressed in this column are the author’s and do not necessaril­y reflect those of USA TODAY.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The Growth Lab Show guest Rob Ganer gives suggestion­s for business owners to make their tax process less stressful.
GETTY IMAGES The Growth Lab Show guest Rob Ganer gives suggestion­s for business owners to make their tax process less stressful.
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