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Corporate tax reform is in the air. Competitive pressures from globalization, as well as skyrocketing budget deficits, are forcing lawmakers to rethink how America's largest businesses are taxed. Some want to close "loopholes." Others want to end all U.S. tax on foreign profits. Some want to lower rates, while still others want to abolish the corporate tax altogether and replace it with an entirely new system. Unlike many other books on tax policy, Corporate Tax Reform: Taxing Profits in the 21st Century is not selling an idea or approaching the issue from a particular political slant. It boils down the complexity of corporate taxation into simple language so readers can make up their own minds about the future of this controversial tax. For too long, the issue of corporate tax reform has been the exclusive domain of lawyers and economists who devote their entire adult lives to studying the tax. Corporate Tax Reform: Taxing Profits in the 21st Century opens the door on these issues to all concerned citizens by providing a compact guide to the economics and politics of the current debate on corporate tax reform.
Provides an overview of the corporate tax and the possibilities for reform
Discusses the impact on businesspeople and individual taxpayers
Boils down complex tax concepts boiled into simple language
Spurs lively discussion of the political issues without political bias
Includes a discussion of ideas for revamping taxes for individuals, since the corporate and individual tax codes are interrelated
What you'll learn
Why economists want to abolish the corporate tax
Why politicians can't get rid of the corporate tax
What the biggest and the slimiest loopholes are
The ramifications of all possible outcomes for businesspeople
How the U.S. tax code compares to foreign competitors
The major options for reform, including the flat tax
How politics and tight budgets will shape the debate before and after the 2012 election
Why individual taxpayers have a stake in the outcome of this debate
Who this book is for
Corporate Tax Reform: Taxing Profits in the 21st Century is for citizens concerned about America's future who want to get beyond the economic jargon and political rhetoric that dominates most discussion of business tax policy. As the debate on the complex issue of corporate tax reform rages in Washington, Corporate Tax Reform: Taxing Profits in the 21st Century is a beginner's guide that is useful to business executives, market analysts, journalists, lawmakers, government policy analysts, lawyers, accountants, as well as students of public policy, law, accounting, and economics.
Check out Tax Notes' review of Corporate Tax Reform.
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