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Business in the United States Who Owns it and How Much Tax They Pay
1. Business in the United States
Who Owns it and How Much Tax They Pay
Michael Cooper, US Treasury Department
John McClelland, US Treasury Department
James Pearce, US Treasury Department
Rich Prisinzano, US Treasury Department
Joseph Sullivan, US Treasury Department
Danny Yagan, UC Berkeley and NBER
Owen Zidar, Chicago Booth and NBER
Eric Zwick, Chicago Booth and NBER
TPE, September 24th, 2015
*The views expressed here are the authorsโ and do not necessarily re๏ฌect those of the
Treasury Department.
2. The Rise of Pass-Throughs
0255075100
PercentageofTotalNetBusinessIncome
1980 1990 2000 2010
Year
Sole Proprietorships
Partnerships
S Corporations
C Corporations
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3. Pass-Throughs and Top-1% Income Share
510152025
Shareofincomeearnedbytop1%(%)
1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Year
Actual
Passโthrough income share fixed at 1980 level
10 p.p.
increase
since 1980 4.4 p.p. increase
via salaries and other
capital income
5.6 p.p. increase
via pass-through
business income
3 / 30
4. This Paper
We use administrative tax data from the U.S. in 2011 to:
1. Identify business owners
2. Estimate how much tax they pay
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5. This Paper
We use administrative tax data from the U.S. in 2011 to:
1. Identify business owners
2. Estimate how much tax they pay
We ๏ฌnd:
1. Pass-through business income is especially concentrated
2. Average federal income tax rate on pass-throughs is 19%
3. 30% of income earned by partnerships cannot be
unambiguously traced to an identi๏ฌable, ultimate owner
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6. Roadmap
1. Linking businesses to their owners
2. Who owns businesses in the pass-through sector?
3. Method for estimating average tax rates
4. Average tax rates on business income
5 / 30
10. . . . but are reflected in K-1s
(issued per partner)
8 / 30
11. Linking Partnerships to Partners
Data Challenge: Partners can be one of many entity types, and
di๏ฌerent kinds of returns are processed by di๏ฌerent systems.
Our Procedure: Link K-1s to partnership returns by merging on
the Document Locator Number (linking 25.5m K-1s to 3.6m
partnerships)
High coverage:
Match 97.7% of partnerships to a K1
Match 98.2% of aggregate ordinary business income
9 / 30
12. Partnerships with Partnership Partners
Partnerships can be owned by other partnerships
Not problematic for sector-wide analyses
Problematic for industry breakdowns and possibly audits
10 / 30
13. Partnerships with Partnership Partners
Partnerships can be owned by other partnerships
Not problematic for sector-wide analyses
Problematic for industry breakdowns and possibly audits
10 / 30
14. Partnerships with Partnership Partners
Partnerships can be owned by other partnerships
Not problematic for sector-wide analyses
Problematic for industry breakdowns and possibly audits
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15. Partnerships with Partnership Partners
Partnerships can be owned by other partnerships
Not problematic for sector-wide analyses
Problematic for industry breakdowns and possibly audits
Use recursive algorithm to trace income through tiers until
only โnontransparentโ partnerships remain
10 / 30
16. Classifying Partners
Partner Type Form Filed
Individual 1040
C- and other corporations 1120, 1120j โ j โ {F,PC,L,RIC,REIT,H,C,POL,ND,SF,FSC}
S-corporations 1120S
Tax-exempt 990, 990j โ j โ {T,R,PF,ZR,C}
Estate/trust 1041
Foreign person/entity 1042, 1042S, 8805, 8288A
Partnerships 1065, 1065B, 1066
Unidenti๏ฌed EIN Taxpayer identi๏ฌer classi๏ฌable as EIN, but tax form unknown
Unidenti๏ฌed TIN type Taxpayer identi๏ฌer not classi๏ฌable
11 / 30
17. Linking Other Business Types to their Owners
1. S-Corporations
Owners must not be other business entities
Link 1120S K1s to ownerโs Form 1040
2. Sole Proprietorships
Income reported directly on Form 1040
3. C-Corporations
Owners are not identi๏ฌable
Use dividend income from Form 1040
12 / 30
19. Number of K1s by Type of Partner
1.3
1.3
1.3
1.4
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9
2.1
2.2
5.0
5.3
5.6
7.4
7.9
73.9
78.3
0 20 40 60 80
Number of K1s by Type of Partner (% of Total)
C- and other corporations
Tax-exempt
S-corporations
Foreign person/entity
Unidentified EIN
Estate/trust
Partnerships
Unidentified TIN type
Individuals
Without Partnership Partners With Partnership Partners
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20. Income Shares by Type of Partner
3.4
4.6
4.1
5.5
5.2
7.1
5.3
7.2
6.8
9.3
7.7
10.5
9.6
13.0
26.3
31.5
42.7
0 10 20 30 40
Partnership Income by Type of Partner (% of Total)
S-corporations
Tax-exempt
Unidentified EIN
Estate/trust
Foreign person/entity
C- and other corporations
Unidentified TIN type
Partnerships
Individuals
Without Partnership Partners With Partnership Partners
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21. Partnership Income Shares by Industry
3.5
4.1
4.6
7.0
10.8
70.0
0 20 40 60 80
Partnership Income by Partnership Industry (% of Total)
Mining, Oil & Gas
Health Care
Manufacturing
Other
Professional Services
Finance & Holding Cos
Note: โFinance & Holding Cosโ includes real estate and rental partnerships (โ 3.1% of total)
15 / 30
22. Business Participation Rates by AGI Pctile
020406080
Sharewithpositiveincome(%)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
AGI percentile
Sole proprietorship income
Cโcorporation income
Sโcorporation income
Partnership income
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23. Business Income Shares by AGI Pctile
020406080
Shareofincometype(%)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
AGI percentile
Sole proprietorship income
Cโcorporation income
Sโcorporation income
Partnership income
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24. Partnership Income Shares by AGI Pctile
Three Sample Industries
010203040
Shareofpartnershipincome(%)
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
AGI percentile
Accommodation and Food Service (NAICS 72)
Professional Services (NAICS 54)
Finance, Holding Companies (NAICS 52, 55, and 531) 18 / 30
26. Tax Rates on Income Distributed to Partners
Calculated Rates
Tik =
TOTA
ik = TAXik
Yik
if k ๏ฌles form โ {1040, 1120, 1120S}
TAssigned
ik otherwise
where
Tik โก tax rate on income type i to partner k from all
partnerships p
i โก income type in {capital gains, dividends, ordinary business
income, interest}
Yik โก sum of payment of income type i to partner k from all
partnerships
TAXik โก change in tax liability from the OTA tax calculator
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27. Tax Rates on Income Distributed to Partners
Assigned Rates
TAssigned
ik =
๏ฃฑ
๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃฒ
๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃด๏ฃณ
TOTA
i,1040 if form โ {1120-RIC,1120-REIT,1066,1041}
TOTA
i,1120 if form โ {1120j}โ j โ {F,PC,L,H,C,POL,ND,SF,FSC}
.025 if form โ {8805,1042S,8288A,1042}
0 if form โ {990,990j}โ j โ {T,R,PF,ZR,C}
.025+TOTA
i,1120
2 if k has unidenti๏ฌed EIN or tin type
where
form is the tax form partner k ๏ฌles
TOTA
i,1040 is the tax rate for individuals from the OTA tax
calculator for income type i
TOTA
i,1120 is the tax rate for C-corporations
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28. Aggregating Tax Rates
Partnership Rates
Tp = iโI kโK TikYikp
Yp
where
the numerator is the sum of tax liabilities over income types i
and partners k associated with payments from partnership p
the denominator is the total payments from partnership p
Partnership Sector Rate
T =
iโI kโK pโP TikYikp
Y
where
the numerator is the sum of tax liabilities from payments from
partnerships
the denominator is the total payments from all partnerships
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29. Tax Rates on Other Business Types
1. S-Corporations
TAXS โก Actual tax minus hypothetical tax with zero 1120S
income
Tax rate is TAXS divided by actual 1120S income
2. Sole Proprietorships
Same method as S-Corporations
3. C-Corporations
TAXC1 โก Actual taxes paid
First layer is TAXC1 divided by taxable income
TAXC2 โก Estimate from Poterba (2004) for dividend+cap
gains tax times income net of ๏ฌrst layer of tax
Final rate combines ๏ฌrst and second layer of tax
22 / 30
31. Tax Rate by Entity Type
13.6
15.9
25.0
22.7
31.6
0102030
Taxrate(%)
Sole Proprietorships Partnerships S-corps C-corps
Average Tax Rate Payout Tax Rate
23 / 30
32. Tax Rates on Partnership Income
By Type of Partner
0.0
2.5
11.7
12.6
15.9
16.5
20.1
21.0
22.0
0 5 10 15 20
Average Tax Rate on Partnership Income (%)
Tax-exempt
Foreign person/entity
Unidentified TIN type
Unidentified EIN
Total Excluding Partnerships
Estate/trust
C- and other corporations
Individuals
S-corporations
24 / 30
33. Partnership Income Type Distribution
By Type of Partner
0 20 40 60 80 100
Composition of Partnership Income (%)
Tax-exempt
Foreign person/entity
Unidentified TIN type
Unidentified EIN
Total Excluding Partnerships
Estate/trust
C- and other corporations
Individuals
S-corporations
Ordinary Income Interest Capital Gains Dividends
25 / 30
34. Tax Rates on Partnership Income
By Industry
14.7
16.6
18.5
22.1
22.3
22.4
0 5 10 15 20 25
Tax Rate by Partnership Industry
Finance & Holding Cos
Manufacturing
Mining, Oil & Gas
Other
Health Care
Professional Services
Note: โFinance & Holding Cosโ includes real estate and rental partnerships (โ 3.1% of total)
26 / 30
35. Partnership Income Type Distribution
By Industry
0 20 40 60 80 100
Composition of Partnership Income (%)
Finance & Holding Cos
Manufacturing
Mining, Oil & Gas
Other
Health Care
Professional Services
Ordinary Income Interest Capital Gains Dividends
Note: โFinance & Holding Cosโ includes real estate and rental partnerships (โ 3.1% of total)
27 / 30
36. Partnership Ownership is Opaque
1. 20% of income earned by unclassi๏ฌable partners
Use income type allocations to โguessโ applicable rate
2. Not all partnership income can be uniquely linked to an
originating partnership
Use recursive algorithm to trace income through tiers until
only โnontransparentโ partnerships remain
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37. Partnership Ownership is Opaque
Some Facts about Nontransparent Partnerships
1. Algorithm reaches ๏ฌxed point after 22 steps
2. 22,417 nontransparent partnerships remain (out of 3.6M)
3. Unsolved partnerships issue 9.6M K1s (out of 25.5M)
4. $100B of taxable income in this group (out of $671B)
5. Tax paid on this income is 8.8% (compared to 17.1% for
remaining $571B)
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38. Conclusion
1. The Rise of Pass-throughs: U.S. business activity has
migrated from corporations to pass-throughs.
2. Who Owns Them?
69% of pass-through income earned by individuals accrues to
the top-1%
The union of income ๏ฌowing (1) to unclassi๏ฌable partners and
(2) through nontransparent partnerships is $200B, or 30% of
income earned in the partnership sector overall.
3. How Much Tax Do They Pay? The average federal income
tax rate on pass-through business income in 2011 is 19%.
4. Implication: With pass-through activity at 1980 levels:
Average rate in 2011 would have been 28% (instead of 24%)
Tax revenue would have been at least $100B higher
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