When President Trump signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) into law on December 22, 2017, it cut the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%, the lowest rate since 1939. 

The Pass-Through Business Deduction 

The TCJA also initiated a 20% deduction on qualified business income for pass-through businesses. This deduction ends after 2025. Pass-through businesses include sole proprietorships, partnerships, limited liability companies, and S corporations. They also include real estate companies, hedge funds, and private equity funds. The deduction phases out for service professionals once their incomes reach $170,050 for singles and $340,100 for joint filers as of 2022. 

Deductible Interest Expenses 

The TCJA limits corporations’ ability to deduct interest expenses to 30% of income. For the first four years, income is based on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA). Starting in the fifth year (2022), it’s based on earnings before interest and taxes. That makes it more expensive for financial firms to borrow. Companies would be less likely to issue bonds and buy back their stock.

Deducting Depreciable Assets

The tax reform law allows businesses to deduct the cost of depreciable assets in one year instead of having to amortize them over several years. This rule doesn’t apply to structures. The equipment must be purchased after September 27, 2017, and before January 1, 2023, to qualify. 

Carried Interest Profits 

The TCJA stiffened the requirements on carried interest profits. Carried interest is income that flows to the general partner in an investment fund. It’s now taxed at 23.8% instead of the top income tax rate. The TCJA extended from one to three years the time for which firms must hold assets to qualify for the lower rate. 

The Corporate Alternative Minimum Tax 

This law eliminates the corporate alternative minimum tax (AMT). Before 2018, the corporate AMT had a 20% tax rate that kicked in if tax credits pushed a firm’s effective tax rate below that percentage. The law repealed the option for companies to deduct certain research-and-development expenses in the year incurred, beginning in 2022. They must capitalize and amortize those expenses.

Tax Treatment of Global Corporations 

The law installed a quasi-territorial system in which global corporations aren’t taxed on foreign profit. The TCJA encourages them to reinvest it in the U.S. This benefits pharmaceutical and high-tech companies the most.  Multinationals were taxed on foreign income earned under the prior worldwide system. They didn’t pay tax until they brought the profits home. Many corporations reinvested profits earned overseas into those markets as a result. It was cheaper for them to borrow at low interest rates in the U.S. than to bring earnings home. Corporations became debt-heavy in the U.S. and cash-rich in overseas operations.  The TCJA allows companies to repatriate the cash they held in foreign cash stockpiles, estimated at $1 trillion by the end of 2017. They pay a one-time tax rate of 15.5% on cash and 8% on equipment.

The Effective Tax Rate for Large Corporations

The U.S. had one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world before President Trump’s tax reform. The 2012 effective rate was 18.6%. It included:

Federal tax rate of 35% for the highest income bracketsA top statutory corporate tax rate of 39.1%, including state corporate taxes

But most large corporations never paid that much. The average corporate tax rate was 29% in 2012, according to a 2017 report by the Congressional Budget Office.

How Corporations Avoid Paying Taxes

How do corporations avoid paying taxes? First, S corporations are the most common type of corporation. These pass-through firms pay no corporate taxes. They pass corporate income, losses, deductions, and credits through to their shareholders instead. The shareholders are then taxed according to these profits or losses at their individual income tax rates. Some global corporations don’t welcome the tax change. They’ve become so adept at avoiding U.S. taxes that it became a competitive advantage. They made more money in U.S. markets than foreign competitors because of their knowledge of the tax code. 

Why Changing the Corporate Tax Rate Doesn’t Help You

Shouldn’t corporations pay more? Ultimately, it might not matter. Corporations pass on their tax burden to you. They pass it on to consumers or workers to keep share prices high when taxes are raised. They attempt to maintain their profit margins at a certain level to satisfy stockholders, so they will either raise prices or reduce wages.

Historical Rates

Taxes were levied on the individual owners of businesses but not on the corporations themselves before the 1894 Tariff Act. Although the Act was ruled unconstitutional, it was replaced by a Tax Act in 1909 in the first year that corporate taxes were levied. The current system is more progressive, meaning that high-earning corporations are taxed at higher rates. The Tax Cut and Jobs Act has made many changes to the tax code. It affects small businesses as well as corporations. Your best bet is to consult with a tax expert to see how it applies to your specific situation.