The Obama administration wants to tax "business." Actually,
the administration currently is pushing at
least three significant business tax hikes. And
that doesn't count whatever might emerge from health care
"reform."
But Fortune's Geoff Colvin helpfully reminds us that
when you tax business you actually tax people. Which means
all of us.
Writes Colvin:
The White House therefore proposes charging all American
companies full freight -- the whole difference between their
overseas taxes and the U.S. corporate rate -- on all their
profits as soon as they're earned, no matter where. This
measure, in their minds, would bring jobs home.
...
That's Obama's first proposed business tax increase. Another
would require companies to account for their inventories on a
first-in-first-out (FIFO) basis rather than a last-in-first-out
(LIFO) one -- an eye-glazing change that's highly significant.
In an era of rising costs, to assume that you're selling your
oldest inventory rather than your newest increases reported
profits and thus taxes, even though nothing real has changed.
If inflation turns worse, as many analysts predict, FIFO would
force companies to pay real taxes on phantom profits as the
value of goods gets inflated while they sit in inventory.
The third business tax hike would be the new levy on carbon
emissions. Regardless of the form it takes -- a cap-and-trade
system or a carbon tax -- and despite the good reasons for it,
it's still a tax, money out the door for which a company gets
nothing.
The problem with sticking it to business in these three major
ways is that, ultimately, business doesn't get stuck. Tax-wise,
a company is just a bunch of incorporation papers; all taxes
are paid by people -- customers, shareholders and employees.
And guess who would bear most of the burden of these tax
increases? It's the U.S. employees of the companies being
taxed.
Research has shown that when business taxes are raised by a
dollar, 70 to 92 cents comes out of employees' pay. When
workers wake up to that fact, they may decide this is one time
they don't want the White House beating up on business.