Less than 3% of U.S. small businesses could face tax hikes

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U.S. President Joe Biden tours the Sewerage & Water Board's Carrollton water plant in New Orleans, U.S., May 6, 2021. /CFP

Less than 3 percent of the roughly 30 million small-business owners in the United States could face tax increases under U.S. President Joe Biden's jobs and infrastructure plan, according to a new analysis by the White House on Friday.

The White House has been seeking to leverage the support and political popularity of small-business owners in its fight to

raise the corporate tax

rate from 21 percent to 28 percent on large corporations such as Walmart and Amazon.com. The move has faced stiff opposition from large national trade groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Business Roundtable.

The proposed increase in the corporate tax rate to 28 percent would not affect any small business that files taxes as a "pass-through entity" such as a limited liability corporation, said a senior administration official. Nearly all small businesses fall in that category, the official said.

The proposed increase in the top income tax bracket by 2.6 percentage points for single earners who earn over $452,700 annually and married couples above $509,300 per year, "would affect less than 3 percent of pass-through business owners," the official said

Most small businesses are pass-through businesses like limited-liability organizations and S corporations that do not pay a corporate tax. Instead, the owners report business income and pay the tax on their personal tax returns.

"There has been a false line of attack circulating that the president's tax plan represents some kind of significant wide-ranging tax increases on small business owners and that's just simply untrue," the official said.

Biden's tax plan attempts to "level the playing field" between small businesses and large multinational corporations, by ensuring that big corporations cannot escape or eliminate the taxes they owe by offshoring jobs and profits in the United States, and pay a lower tax rate than small businesses, the White House has said.

It faces stiff opposition from Republican lawmakers who have showed little signs of being swayed by small-business sentiment.

Source(s): Reuters