Quote:
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
Why blame Burger King? Maybe the US should develop a more friendly business climate.
I might even lunch at the King tomorrow, and follow it with a donut. So if you don't hear from me, this was fun!
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We sound pretty darn business friendly. Our effective tax rate is around 13 - 22% depending on accounting. Should we make it simpler? Yes. Should we get rid of all deductions in both personal and individual taxes? Again I say yes but just imagine taking away the interest deduction on homes to understand the difficulty one faces.
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/20...ype=blogs&_r=0
Earlier this year, the Government Accountability Office, a federal agency,
examined corporate tax returns to determine the taxes corporations actually pay. It found that in 2010, profitable corporations based in the United States had an effective federal tax rate of 13 percent on their worldwide income, 17 percent including state and local taxes.....
....The independent economist Martin A. Sullivan
concluded that the truth is somewhere in between, with the effective corporate tax rate in the mid to upper 20 percent range. In the Nov. 25 issue of Tax Notes magazine, the G.A.O. economists who conducted the original study acknowledged that averaging their results over several years and including foreign taxes, as Mr. Lyon did, would raise the effective tax rate to 22.9 percent. The remaining difference between their study and the Lyon study results from the inclusion of companies with losses.