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3 Business in the United States
by
McClelland, John
, Prisinzano, Richard
, Yagan, Danny
, Pearce, James
, Zwick, Eric
, Zidar, Owen
, Cooper, Michael
, Sullivan, Joseph
2016
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3 Business in the United States
by
McClelland, John
, Prisinzano, Richard
, Yagan, Danny
, Pearce, James
, Zwick, Eric
, Zidar, Owen
, Cooper, Michael
, Sullivan, Joseph
2016
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Journal Article
3 Business in the United States
2016
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Overview
“Pass-through” businesses like partnerships and S-corporations now generate over half of US business income and account for much of the post-1980 rise in the top-1% income share. We use administrative tax data from 2011 to identify pass-through business owners and estimate how much tax they pay. We present three findings: (1) relative to traditional business income, pass-through business income is substantially more concentrated among high-earners; (2) partnership ownership is opaque: 20% of the income goes to unclassifiable partners, and 15% of the income is earned in circularly owned partnerships; and (3) the average federal income tax rate on US pass-through business income is 19%—much lower than the average rate on traditional corporations. If pass-through activity had remained at 1980’s low level, strong but straightforward assumptions imply that the 2011 average US tax rate on total US business income would have been 28% rather than 24%, and tax revenue would have been approximately $100 billion higher.
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press
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