Examples of double taxation in the following topics:
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- In many countries, corporate profits are taxed at a corporate tax rate, and dividends paid to shareholders are taxed at a separate rate -- double taxation.
- This is the concept of double taxation: first the company was taxed for its profits, and later shareholders were taxed for their dividends.
- Such a system is sometimes referred to as "double taxation", because any profits distributed to shareholders will eventually be taxed twice.
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- The primary characteristic an LLC shares with a corporation is limited liability, and the primary characteristic it shares with a partnership is the availability of pass-through income taxation (i.e. no double taxation).
- pass-through taxation (i.e., no double taxation), unless the LLC elects to be taxed as a C corporation;
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- There is also the issue of double taxation, wherein the corporation is taxed on its profits and shareholders are also taxed on their earnings.
- S status combines the legal environment of standard corporations with U.S. federal income taxation similar to that of partnerships.
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- S status combines the legal environment of C corporations with partnership-like federal income taxation.
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- However, outsourcing is not solely a U.S. phenomenon as corporations in various nations with low tax rates outsource as well, which means that high taxation can only partially, if at all, explain US outsourcing.
- It is argued that lowering the corporate income tax and ending the double-taxation of foreign-derived revenue (taxed once in the nation where the revenue was raised, and once from the U.S.) will alleviate corporate outsourcing and make the U.S. more attractive to foreign companies.
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- Colonial uprising following the direct taxation on printed materials led to the first joint colonial response to British measures.
- The Stamp Act met great resistance in the colonies, and the First Congress of the American Colonies, also known as the Stamp Act Congress, was held in 1765 to devise a unified protest against British taxation.
- During the war, the British national debt nearly doubled.
- The theoretical issue that would soon hold center stage was the matter of taxation without representation.
- The colonists enjoyed actual representation in their own legislative assemblies, and the issue was whether these legislatures, rather than Parliament, were in fact the sole recipients of the colonists' consent with regard to taxation.
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- Detrimental practices including topsoil depletion, non-renewable logging, and most mineral and metal extraction processes (including the mining of bauxite, chromium, coal, gold and silver) would provide additional taxation targets.
- No doubt many businesspeople will cringe at the prospect of a massive shift in taxation, but it's what would not be taxed that makes this proposition somewhat appealing.
- Furthermore, once a more sensible shift in taxation has been put into place, a common-sense approach to subsidies could also be adopted.
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- In 1071, the Byzantine Empire suffered two important defeats, against the Turks in the Battle of Manzikert and against the Normans in Bari, sometimes called the Double Disasters.
- During the time that the Normans had conquered southern Italy, the Byzantine Empire was in a state of internal decay; the administration of the Empire had been wrecked, the efficient government institutions that provided Basil II with a quarter of a million troops and adequate resources by taxation had collapsed within a period of three decades.
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- His first act was to submit to the king a statement of his guiding principles: "No bankruptcy, no increase of taxation, no borrowing."
- Nonetheless, the deficit was still so large that it prevented him from attempting to realize his favorite scheme of substituting for indirect taxation a single tax on land.
- In the preamble to the former, Turgot boldly announced the abolition of privilege and the subjection of all three estates of the realm to taxation (although the clergy were afterwards excepted).
- He advocated doubling the representation of the Third Estate to satisfy the people.
- As a last resort, Calonne proposed to the king the suppression of internal customs duties and argued in favor of the taxation of the property of nobles and clergy.