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Economic Growth and Income Tax Rates

12th April 2011
By Trevor Beach in Taxes
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Any single-member LLC can also choose to be taxed like a corporation by filing Form 8832. If you haven't filed Form 8832 and told the IRS you want to be taxed like a corporation, then by default you are considered a sole proprietor for tax purposes and should file Schedule C.

Schedule C is the form on which all the major income and expense items for your sole proprietorship are reported. This form also tells you the "bottom line" for the business. Line 31 shows whether you made a profit (and therefore have taxable income) or a loss (which can typically be used to offset other sources of income).

The amount from Line 31 is then transferred to Form 1040, Line 12, where it becomes part of the calculation for total personal income.

2. Form 4562, Depreciation and Amortization.

Don't let the name of this form scare you. Depending on your situation, you may not have to touch deprecation or amortization with a ten-foot pole. If you bought any business equipment during the year, and you meet the requirements, you can deduct 100% of the cost in the year of purchase rather than depreciating it over several years. See the form instructions for details, or talk with your accountant about Section 179, which allows virtually all sole proprietors to say goodbye to those complex depreciation rules. Even if you do qualify for the Section 179 deduction, you still have to complete Form 4562. The total expense from Form 4562 is reported on Schedule C, Line 13.


3. Form 8829, Expenses for Business Use of Your Home.

If you qualify, you can take a deduction for a home office. This is one of the best tax breaks available, because you are getting a business deduction for money you would have spent anyway for things like mortgage interest (or rent), property taxes, homeowner's (or renter's) insurance, and utilities. So this is definitely worth looking into. The total expense from Form 8829 is transferred onto Schedule C, Line 30.

4. Schedule SE, Self-Employment Tax.

If your business has a profit of $400 or more, you must calculate and pay self-employment tax on that profit via Schedule SE. Your self-employment tax is then transferred from Schedule SE onto Form 1040, where it is added to your federal income tax and becomes part of your total federal tax liability.

Although the effect of income tax rates on our economy and economic growth always leads to a lively debate, never is the question more pertinent than during a recession. So we must ask: Do higher taxes on the top income brackets lead to slower economic growth? Conversely, do lower taxes on the wealthiest Americans always create untold new wealth which will trickle down to the rest of the economy?


At this point we are not interested in opinions, only facts. And to answer the above questions, we must consider the following economic facts.

During the 1960's the highest federal income tax rate, applicable to only the wealthiest of Americans, averaged 89.4% while real GDP per capita grew an average of 3.5% per year. In the '70's, the maximum federal tax rate was lowered to an average of 70.2% yet the real GDP per capita only grew an annual average of 2.3%.
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