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The Most Taxing Questions – Taxes and Cash Flows © 2004 Dr. B. C. Paul.

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Presentation on theme: "The Most Taxing Questions – Taxes and Cash Flows © 2004 Dr. B. C. Paul."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Most Taxing Questions – Taxes and Cash Flows © 2004 Dr. B. C. Paul

2 Taxes and Project Analysis  Showed you how to get cash flows and compute returns but do you really get the money?  Income taxes of 32% - 36%  Sales taxes of 7%  Property taxes of several percent of asset values  An Average American usually works a little over 4 months/year just to pay taxes  We often talk of “Before” and “After” Tax Analysis

3 Rates of Return  Real and Nominal  Before tax and After tax  And of course combinations Nominal – After Tax Rate of Return  Need to Make Sure You Are Consistent

4 Doing A Cash Flow With Taxes  Cash flows for Engineering Economic Analysis are simply lists of money received and money spent on a time line showing when the event occurs  Adding Taxes to Your Cash Flow  Taxes are an expense – put them on the time-line where they occur  Implicit in putting Tax on the time line is that you know what the amount is

5 Several Types of Taxes  Sales Taxes  Charged to End User of Product  Normally not charged on raw material inputs to a process  If make aluminum out of bauxite, bauxite is normally not taxed  Tax occurs whether or not business or individual is making a “profit”  Ie they can make your initial negative cash flows larger, not just your later positive flows smaller

6 Types of Taxes  Property Taxes  Levied on value of assets (saw some examples with Herby and Hanna Housing)  Also levied whether or not business has a profit  Inventory Taxes  Normally target retailers to get them to move goods not just sit on them  Again levied whether or not business has a profit

7 Income Tax  Normally the single largest bite  Bush has tried to cut rate but can still be 36%  Historically and in some places income tax can be 90%  Extent to Which a Business pays income taxes varies with how business is set up

8 Common Business Arrangements (Liability and Tax Issues)  Sole Proprietorship  This is your own business (sometimes a jointly owned business with a spouse)  Husband-Wife teams may become one entity for tax purposes  Business is handled as part of your personal tax return  Generally use a series of schedules with a 1040 long form  Profits and losses become part of your personal income

9 The Sole Proprietorship  Liability Issues  The actions and liabilities of the business are your actions and liabilities  In Civil action your personal assets may be seized to satisfy business problems  Risk issues  You must capitalize the business and assume all the risk

10 The Partnership  Risk Mitigation  The capitalization and skills aspects of the business are split between multiple individuals  For Tax Purposes the earnings and losses of the business split to each individuals taxes - just like a sole proprietorship only earnings or losses are ratios of ownership

11 The Partnership Peril  Partnership is seldom used today  Liability problem  The actions of any partner or the business become your actions  Including the personal debts and actions of your partner

12 The Corporation  Incorporation causes the business to become a separate entity - legally and for tax purposes  You have no liability for the actions and finances of the business (unless there was knowing illegal action - pierce the corporate veil)  Board of Directors generally are not liable and company often buys insurance for them

13 Incorporating  Incorporating is relatively inexpensive  About $50 to file  There is a lot of paperwork both to create and maintain  Have to decide where to incorporate - Incorporation is a State legal action  have to have some sort of business presence in your state of incorporation

14 Taxing Corporations  A corporation fills out its own tax returns and pays its own taxes  Only distributions of earnings are a taxable event for individual owners of corporations  Sale of your interest in a corporation will usually create a “Capital Gains” event.  The Double Tax Problem  The company pays tax on its profits  Then you pay taxes when the distribute them to you

15 Fighting Double Taxation  Individuals who incorporate their freelance work use Corporation for protection  Paper work transfers earnings to individual as wages or bonuses so corporation makes little or no money  Subchapter S Corporations / Trusts  Corporations distribute their tax events directly to the share-holders  Share holders deal with on their own income tax

16 S Type Corporations  Attempt to give people what use to be possible with partnerships  Paper-work is rather restrictive  Can make for nightmarish individual tax returns  There are limits on what S Type can do  Corporate Veil may not be quite as effective


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