Businesses and taxation

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Businesses and taxation

Introduction

Setting up and running a business can be a daunting prospect. There are many decisions to be made e.g. what goods and/or services to produce, where to set up, how to advertise, what prices to charge, how to raise finance. There is also important paperwork to master and maintain. Fortunately, new business owners are not left to do all this alone. Several bodies can provide helpful support and guidance. This Case Study shows how the Inland Revenue/Customs & Excise help businesses in understanding and receiving what they are entitled to, together with understanding and paying what they owe.

Businesses make key contributions to the economy through the products they supply and the taxes they pay. Tax revenues paid by businesses, as well as the personal taxes we all pay, help to fund the economy's public sector. These revenues help to pay for essential services from which we all benefit directly or indirectly e.g. schools, police, medical services, well maintained roads and street lighting.

In addition to collecting taxes, the Inland Revenue/makes some payments to sections of the general public e.g. through tax credits. A good example of a tax credit is the Working Tax Credit, which supports working people on low income by topping up their earnings (a form of reverse tax).

A main aim of government is to stimulate the economy by helping businesses to grow, because this growth creates more jobs and generates additional tax revenues that the government can use to finance its own expenditure programme.

Businesses and taxation

Business growth

Many business owners regard business growth as desirable. So, too, do governments. There are many ways in which businesses can grow e.g. by:

increasing the value and volume of their sales

employing more people

producing a wider range of goods and services

expanding to larger and better premises

starting to export to other countries.

Another possible route to growth is for a business to change its ownership structure e.g. by becoming a company or a limited partnership.

In the UK, large numbers of small enterprises operate as sole traders (one owner), or ordinary partnerships (small number of partners). These forms of business are easy to set up but are faced with having unlimited liability. This means that their owners are personally liable for all debts incurred by the business. They may have to sell off personal possessions to cover business debts.

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For limited companies and limited liability partnerships, their owners' liability extends only to the amount they have invested in a company or limited partnership.

By growing, businesses give themselves several advantages.

1.by producing and selling on a larger scale, businesses can reduce their average costs and thereby increase profitability

2.seeing their business grow motivates the owners towards even greater effort

3.larger companies can raise finance more easily. For example, by becoming a public limited company (PLC) a business is able to raise funds for expansion by selling shares which are traded on the Stock Exchange.

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