Marginal Tax on Corporate Profits was 74.2% in the 1st Quarter
From the Bureau of Economic Analysis news release of May 29:
Profits from current production (corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments) increased $42.6 billion in the first quarter. . . Taxes on corporate income increased $31.6 billion. . . [therefore] profits after tax . . . increased $11.1 billion.
In other words, taxes extracted 74.2% of any added (marginal) corporate earnings, leaving only scraps for stockholder.
Companies that lost money, on the other hand, were often bailed out and/or nationalized.
Why bother even trying to maximize profits or minimize losses?
Filed under: Finance, Banking & Monetary Policy; Tax and Budget Policy
Tags: bureau of economic analysis, corporate earnings, corporate profits, earnings, losses, marginal tax, profits, stockholder, tax, taxes

