Corporate tax: 두 판 사이의 차이
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Corporate Taxes | Corporate Taxes | ||
Corporate income tax is the tax imposed on the profits earned by corporations, It's a charge levied on a firm’s taxable income, which represents the profit remaining after deducting all allowable expenses from total sales. | Corporate income tax is the tax imposed on the profits earned by corporations, It's a charge levied on a firm’s taxable income, which represents the profit remaining after deducting all allowable expenses from total sales. | ||
Korea has a graduated tax, | Korea has a graduated tax, related to the income : Higher tax rate for higher income. | ||
The marginal tax rate is the rate applied to the next dollar of income. | |||
The average tax rate is calculated by dividing total taxes by total taxable income. | |||
*Average Tax Rate = Taxable IncomeTotal / Corporate Tax = % | |||
For example, a Korean corporation with a taxable income of 30 billion KRW would be taxed as this: | |||
- For the first 200 million KRW, 9 %. | |||
- From 200 million to 20 billion KRW, increases to 19 %. | |||
- For income between 20 billion and 300 billion KRW, 21 % . | |||
Calculating under this system, the total corporate tax amounts to 5.88 billion KRW, giving an average tax rate of approximately 19.6 % | Calculating under this system, the total corporate tax amounts to 5.88 billion KRW, giving an average tax rate of approximately 19.6 % | ||
The U.S. applies a flat 21% rate, as per the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, since the Trump Administration. It means that all corporate income is taxed at the same rate regardless of its level. | |||