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by AnthonyMouse
4447 days ago
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> So if Apple had $1B in overseas profits, paid 5% in Ireland as income tax, then wanted to repatriate the remainder to the US, the government would seek $30B in tax -- not the $35B that would be indicated by our 35% corporate income tax rate. That's not what double taxation is. Double taxation is that both corporate income and corporate dividends are taxed. Suppose a corporation makes $10/share in profit and wants to issue it as a dividend. First they would pay corporate 35% income tax on the profit and be left with $6.50/share, then if they issued a $6.50/share dividend, the shareholders would have to pay income tax on it again and be left with only $4.225 of the original $10. If a foreign government also extracted a cut then the money would be taxed thrice. |
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Dollars don't pay taxes, taxable entities do.
A corporation is a separate legal entity that serves as the tax base. If it makes an income, it will pay a tax on that income.
An individual is also a separate legal entity that serves as a tax base. If a corporation pays an individual dividends, then the individual will pay tax on the capital gains from their investment.
How is this any different than when a company pays you an income. First, the Federal government taxes you, then the State government does, then come Payroll taxes, then any local taxes, then you have to pay property tax, then you have to pay sales tax. Each dollar is quintuple-taxed! Or more!
edit: GWU PhD Law Professor spells it out better than I could: http://writ.lp.findlaw.com/buchanan/20030220.html