Britannica Money

Policy issues

Integration

A major policy issue concerns the question of integrating income taxes on corporations and shareholders. Partial integration (or dividend relief) may be attained by lessening or eliminating the so-called double taxation of distributed profits resulting from separate income taxes on corporations and shareholders. Full integration could be achieved only by overlooking the existence of the corporation for income tax purposes and taxing shareholders on undistributed profits as well as on dividends, as if the income had been earned by a partnership. This approach may be suitable for corporations having few shareholders. It is allowed on an optional basis in the United States for certain corporations having only one class of stock and no more than 10 shareholders. Full integration has generally been conceded to be impracticable for corporations with large numbers of shareholders.

One method of partial integration is to apply a reduced rate of corporate tax to the distributed part of profits, as is the case in a split-rate system. With a zero rate on distributed profits, the corporate tax would apply only to undistributed profits. The same effect could be achieved by allowing corporations a deduction for dividends it has paid. The split-rate system offers a tax incentive for distribution of profits and sometimes has been advocated as an instrument for curtailing internal financing of corporations. In support of such a policy, it has been argued that liberal payouts of dividends will strengthen the capital market, improve the allocation of investment funds, and lessen the concentration (or monopolization) of industry. Critics have questioned whether these objectives will be attained and have pointed out that larger dividend distributions would tend to reduce savings and investment, because shareholders would consume part of the additional income received.

Another approach to integration involves granting shareholders a credit (offset against their individual tax liability) for the corporate tax allocable to dividends they have received. Such a method functions much like the withholding system on an individual’s wage and salary earnings. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, a variety of approaches were undertaken in different countries. Germany combined a credit with its split-rate system to eliminate the added burden of the corporate tax on dividends. To encourage people to save, Chile opted to levy a tax rate of only 15 percent on an individual’s undistributed earnings while taxing distributed earnings at much higher rates (up to 45 percent). The systems employed in the United Kingdom and France have provided resident shareholders a credit for about half of the corporate tax. A Canadian credit lacked two important components of the French and British systems—the inclusion in dividends of the credit and refunds for shareholders whose individual tax rate was less than the corporate rate. The omission of these features favours high-income shareholders who are subject to high individual tax rates compared with those having lower incomes.

Opinions on the desirability of tax integration differ widely, as do judgments about the economic effects of the corporation tax and the nature of the relationship between corporations and their shareholders. A key question concerns the revenue that is forgone when distributed profits are not subject to the so-called double taxation (i.e., the corporation’s income tax and the shareholder’s dividend income tax). Could that revenue be taxed in ways that are preferable from the standpoint of equity and economic effects? Various approaches to dividend tax relief have the potential to compensate for any revenue loss.

Investment incentives

The adverse effect of the corporate income tax on investment can be lessened by accelerating the rate at which the cost of new machinery and buildings is written off against taxable income through depreciation allowances. Accelerated depreciation may take the form of an additional deduction in the first year—an “initial allowance”—or may be spread over several years. Although the increase in early years in depreciation allowances for any one asset will be matched by a reduction in allowances for this asset in future years—the total being limited to 100 percent of cost—the acceleration is advantageous to the taxpayer. It postpones payment of tax, facilitates financing of investment out of internal funds, saves interest costs, and reduces risk. Another form of incentive, the investment allowance, permits investors to deduct from taxable income a certain percentage of the cost of eligible assets in addition to depreciation allowances. The total deductions thus may exceed the cost of an eligible asset over its lifetime. A related approach, the tax credit, reduces the income tax payable by a certain percentage of the cost of eligible forms of new investment. Alternatively, an investment grant, in the form of a payment from the government to those making certain kinds of new investment, may be provided. Investment allowances, tax credits, and investment grants reduce the cost of new equipment and plants and thus make investment more attractive.

Many industrialized countries, including the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom, have used accelerated depreciation and other special incentives to promote commerce. These incentives reduce tax revenues but may be considered preferable to an outright cut in tax rates because they are selective, being extended to firms that make new investments. In an effort to attract investment by both foreign and domestic companies, less-developed countries (and countries making a transition from socialism) sometimes offer accelerated depreciation or investment allowances and—despite opinions that such policies are likely to be ineffective—“tax holidays,” which provide full exemption from income tax for new firms for the first several years of operation.

Outlays for research and development (R and D), such as purchases of a plant and equipment, are intended to yield returns over a period of years and are frequently given special tax treatment. In the United States, corporations and individual taxpayers may choose between deducting R and D expenditures in full or capitalizing them and writing them off over their useful life—or over five years if the useful life is indeterminable. Canada allows corporations to immediately deduct current and capital expenditures for scientific research related to the business. In addition, government grants to corporations for R and D are exempt from taxation in Canada.

Accelerated depreciation allowances and current deductions of R and D outlays will result in accounting losses (when they exceed net income) if they are computed without regard to these deductions. The incentive effects of the provisions can be enhanced (and the drawbacks of investment risk reduced) by permitting net operating losses suffered in one year to be offset against taxable income of other years. Tax laws commonly allow such losses to be carried back against income of prior years (which thus gives rise to refunds of income taxes previously paid) or carried forward to future years. If, however, accounting losses that do not reflect economic reality can be “passed through” to the owners of a business, perhaps by the use of a partnership, the losses can offset income from other sources and therefore provide a tax shelter.

The extent to which investment incentives should be offered is a major policy issue. It is related to the large question of how much emphasis should be placed on present consumption (private and public) rather than on future consumption that would result from increased investment. This raises philosophical and political questions as well as technical and economic ones.