Using the Tax Code to Create Abundance
by Kalinda Rose Stevenson
Published on this site: October 28th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

"Anyone may so arrange his affairs so that his taxes
shall be as low as possible. He is not bound to choose that
pattern which best pays the treasury. There is not even a
patriotic duty to increase one's taxes." - Learned Hand
You know that old riddle. "Which came first, the chicken
or the egg?" I have my own version of the riddle. "Which
comes first? Taxes or expenses?"
Unlike the chicken or egg conundrum, this riddle has a clear
answer. And the answer is, "It depends on whether you
are paying taxes as an individual or as a corporation."
We hear a lot of talk these days about the inherent unfairness
of the tax system. The claim is that "the rich"
get tax breaks while middle and lower class taxpayers pay
far more than their fair share.
What gets lost in these comments is an even more fundamental
imbalance in the tax system. The tax system favors corporations
vastly more than it favors individuals.
The crucial difference between corporate taxes and personal
taxes is the point at which taxes are calculated. If you are
taxed as an individual, your taxes come off the top of your
income. If you are taxed as a corporation, your taxes are
calculated after expenses.
"You don't pay taxes - they take taxes." - Chris
Rock
Consider how the taxation system works. If you are an employee,
you collect a paycheck. Before you ever get your paycheck,
there will be deductions. Federal tax, FICA, maybe state tax,
maybe medical insurance. You will be left with your "take
home pay." Interesting concept, isn't it? What you "take
home" will be less than what you earned.
In other words, you get to use whatever is left over of your
salary or wages after taxes. Food, housing, clothing, transportation,
medical, dental, recreation. You need to pay for all of these
expenses with your "after tax" money.
"Our new Constitution is now established, and has an
appearance that promises permanency; but in this world nothing
can be said to be certain, except death and taxes." -
Benjamin Franklin
As one example, let's consider medical costs. Who pays your
medical expenses if you are an employee? Medical insurance
in the United States is an unwieldy and expensive mess. Maybe
you are covered by your employer, maybe not. What we do know
is that medical costs are rising exponentially, and most striking
unions cite increasing medical costs to employees as their
primary grievance. Even if you have medical insurance, you
will have to pay deductibles. And you will pay these expenses
with after tax dollars.
And when you finally come to calculate your taxes on your
1040 form, you will find that you cannot claim medical costs
as deductions on your tax return unless medical expenses exceed
3% of your income.
"The avoidance of taxes is the only intellectual pursuit
that still carries any reward." - John Maynard Keynes
What happens if you set up a corporation? You are the founder
of a corporation and hire yourself as the employee of the
corporation. As the founder of the corporation, you are able
to set up a health insurance plan with pretax dollars. If
there are insurance deductibles, you, as the founder, can
write a resolution and put it in your corporate book. Your
generous corporation will cover all of the costs of medical
care for its employees (that means you,) including deductibles,
and any medical costs that most insurance policies will not
cover.
After all, as the founder of the corporation, you are free
to set up any medical reimbursement plan you wish, as long
as you put it in writing in your corporate resolutions. And
before you figure out how much tax the corporation owes, you
first calculate all of the medical expenses paid by your corporation
and then calculate the tax after expenses.
That means, instead of filling out a 1040 form for personal
taxes, with your non-deductible medical expenses, you file
an 1120 corporate form. If you are an employee of your own
corporation, your corporation can pay for your medical insurance.
And if there are deductibles, your corporation can file a
resolution to cover all uninsured medical costs. Do you grasp
how significant this distinction is for your economic well-being?
This distinction is particularly meaningful for me. I have
a chronic health condition that my former medical insurance
company considers "high risk." The insurance company
agreed to continue to insure me, but at a cost that was exorbitantly
high, and would have come out of my personal after-tax income.
For me, this was not only a matter of money. It was a matter of being able
to get any kind of medical insurance. Many people with chronic
health problems become "uninsurable" at any price.
However, since I am the CEO of the corporation I founded,
I was able to set up a health insurance program through the
corporation, at a significantly lower rate than the one offered
by my prior insurance company. The corporation now pays the
health insurance premiums with pre-tax dollars. And as the
founder of the corporation, I have written a resolution that
the corporation will pay any deductible costs, and any other
costs related to my medical care. Only after all of my medical
costs are paid, the corporation will calculate the taxes it
owes.
I could give other examples. Your corporation can provide
generous pensions, annuities, life insurance policies, and
other benefits to you as an employee. It can even donate generously
to nonprofit corporations, schools, and churches, if it chooses.
And after it has paid all of these expenses, and made all
of these charitable donations, it can then calculate tax on
the wee bit of profit left over. Or maybe the corporation
will not have any profit at all, and then it will not pay
taxes at all.
I feel compelled to point out that it has not always been
this way. Corporate America used to pay a much higher portion
of taxes than it pays now. This is the real unfairness of
the tax system. The discrepancy between tax rules for corporations
and tax rules for individuals means that the tax burden has
shifted from corporations to individuals.
"We don't pay taxes. Only the little people pay taxes."
- Leona Helmsley
Why are "the rich" getting richer? At the heart
of the matter, "the rich" understand the tax system
and know how to set up corporate entities to make the most
of the favorable tax laws available.
Is it fair? Is it just? Can you or I change the system? For
myself, this is a bigger challenge than I am willing undertake.
It is the way it is.
Unless you want to play David against Goliath, or Don Quixote
tilting at windmills, you would do well to understand the
inherent imbalance in the system, so that you can use the
system for your own benefit. This means that the fastest route
to keeping more of your own money and creating wealth is to
set up a corporation and pay taxes as a corporation rather than an
individual.
"You know, gentlemen, that I do not owe any personal
income tax. But nevertheless, I send a small check, now and
then, to the Internal Revenue Service out of the kindness
of my heart." - David Rockefeller
My point is that setting up a corporation allows you to use
your income to provide benefits you cannot afford with your
after-tax dollars. The corporate tax code allows you to create
wealth in ways that you will never be able to accomplish as
long as your taxes come off the top of your income. In addition,
corporate tax rates are lower than personal tax rates.
If you have not set up a corporation, I encourage you to
consider doing so. People are afraid that incorporating means
a lot of extra work and trouble. Yes, incorporating involves
time, effort, and expense. And keeping your corporate records
up to date also takes time, effort, and expense. You will
also need to have increased knowledge of taxes and accounting.
The reward for this extra work and effort is that you will
be able to use corporate tax rules for your own benefit, and
the benefit of those you choose to support with your money.
"We contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into
prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to
lift himself up by the handle." - Winston Churchill
To answer my own riddle, "Which comes first? Taxes or
expenses?" If you are paying taxes as an individual,
the taxes come first. If you are paying as a corporation,
the expenses come first.
This difference is enormous. When you understand this distinction,
you have one of the most powerful means to transform your
economic life from struggle to abundance.
Knowing how to use the corporate tax code legally and ethically
will allow you to create an abundant life far beyond anything
you will be able to create with the personal tax code.

Kalinda Rose Stevenson WARNING: BEFORE YOU INVEST
IN REAL ESTATE
FREE "No Money Limits Consumer Guide
to Real Estate Investor Training." http://www.nomoneylimits.com

|