June 21, 2007

IRS may shift AMT gap burden to small biz

Filed under: Top Business News — Carl @ 10:14 am

IRS may shift AMT gap burden to small biz

To raise revenue, the feds plan to stick their noses deeper into small-business financial records.

By Ian Mount, FSB Magazine contributor
April 2 2007: 12:10 PM EDT

(FSB Magazine) — Carson Stanwood has no problem with the Internal Revenue Service going after tax cheats. The founder of Stanwood & Partners Public Relations, based in Jackson Hole, Wyo., understands that paying their taxes in full puts small-business owners like him at a competitive disadvantage against the corner cutters.

But when contemplating some of the Treasury Department’s recent enforcement proposals - such as vastly expanding the number of Form 1099s he would have to issue and requiring him to verify his independent contractors’ taxpayer IDs with the IRS - Stanwood, 47, changes his tune.

"I applaud them going after this until I hear that it’s going to vastly increase my paperwork. I believe it would add 20 to 25 percent to what I pay my bookkeeper - another $6,000 or $7,000 a year - which would suck," says Stanwood, whose firm took in about $1.5 million last year. "That’s two or three laptops the employees won’t get, smaller Christmas bonuses, or an epic vacation my wife and I don’t take."

It’s not shocking that the IRS is being pushed to improve its reported collection rate of 86 percent. Faced with a gargantuan deficit and demands to reform the alternative minimum tax - a levy initially aimed at the very wealthy that is now snaring millions of middle-income taxpayers - Congress and the Bush administration have been looking for cash under the cushions. And they seem to have found some in an IRS report that shows the amount of unpaid taxes (known as the "tax gap") to be $290 billion a year, of which $109 billion is attributed to underreported business income, largely from small companies.

But while no one wants to stand up for tax cheats, Stanwood is in good company when he rejects the proposals made so far: Three trade groups - the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Federation of Independent Businesses and the Small Business Legislative Council - have formed the Coalition for Fairness in Tax Compliance (www.taxcompliancefairness.org) to ensure that IRS plans don’t amount to a swipe at law-abiding business owners, who according to the U.S. Small Business Administration already pay 67 percent more per employee in annual tax-compliance costs than do companies with more than 500 workers ($1,304 vs. $780).

"I have no problem with tracking down tax cheats. But I don’t believe in creating additional burdens on people who are doing everything right," says Jason Speer, vice president of Quality Float Works, a Schaumburg, Ill., leveling-device company with $2.2 million in annual sales. "Why penalize everyone? That doesn’t make sense."

From the carpenter who offers discounts for work paid in cash to the freelance designer who doesn’t report income from corporate clients he bills less than $600 annually (the limit that trips an IRS Form 1099), some small businesses and independent contractors clearly understate their income on tax forms. IRS data show that independent contractors report 96 percent of the income for which they get information returns (Form 1099, for example), but only 46 percent of income for which they don’t.

So the administration’s budget for the 2008 fiscal year proposes getting more information by making credit card companies report each merchant’s credit card sales to the IRS.

Another proposal would require businesses to issue a Form 1099 not just to all independent contractors but also to all corporate contractors they pay more than $600 a year (say, the local Roto-Rooter or messenger service).

A third proposal would make businesses verify with the IRS the taxpayer ID numbers of all independent contractors and withhold taxes for any who ask.

What angers many small-business advocates about the proposals, beyond their invasiveness and red tape, is that they represent a scattershot approach that makes little attempt to target the likeliest tax cheats. IRS data do not break down under-reported business income by transaction type or industry, so the tax authority doesn’t know how much revenue is lost to the under-the-table auto mechanic vs. the eBay merchant who doesn’t report his credit card sales - or someone else entirely.

"There is no data available to identify what payments aren’t reported - cash, credit card, under or over $600, business-to-business, business-to-consumer," says Macey Davis, tax counsel at the NFIB (www.nfib.com). The administration is "coming up with proposals prematurely without data to back them up."

It’s easy to see how small businesses could feel unjustly picked on. A study from Citizens for Tax Justice (www.ctj.org) found that through tax breaks and shelters, profitable Fortune 500 companies paid an effective corporate tax rate of 17 percent in 2002 and 2003, far below the 31 percent paid by the average company with less than $2.5 million in annual revenue.

"We have 20 employees. We don’t have the advantages of a big company with accountants and tax shelters," says Quality Float Works’ Speer, who says his company, an S corporation, paid 28 percent in taxes on net income after expenses in 2005.

Finally, for all the burden they would impose on small business, these three enforcement proposals would fill less than one tenth of 1 percent of the tax gap, collecting $187 million in 2008 and $19.2 billion over the next ten years. By comparison, improving tax collection on offshore accounts held by U.S. residents would generate about $50 billion a year, estimates Reuven
Avi-Yonah, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School.

It’s no surprise, then, that business owners such as Carson Stanwood have little desire to make the effort to comply with IRS rules of dubious efficacy. "If the IRS wants this money, go find it yourself," he says. "I’m not going to do it for you. I don’t have the time."



CLICK HERE
to find this article.

Sphere: Related Content


Tell a Friend

How we did it

Filed under: Top Business News — Carl @ 9:20 am

From June 21, 2007

At the Bank of Scotland launch dinner for The Entrepreneur Challenge, business figures and entrepreneurs offered excellent advice for contenders

Getting started in business can be a daunting task, no matter how much determination and drive an entrepreneur has. It can be a lonely path at times, but there are people willing and able to give great advice on how to keep going through the tough times and what not to do to save trouble in the future.

Therefore, when Bank of Scotland hosted a dinner at London’s Quaglino’s restaurant in May to launch The Entrepreneur Challenge, we took the opportunity to ask the great and good of the business world for advice for up-and-coming entrepreneurs.

We spoke with business figures and entrepreneurs at the dinner resulting in a series of interviews, the first three below, where established players on the business field gave their top tips and advice for becoming a success.

Streaming notes: Click the links and the files will automatically open in your default video player. This is a fairly long item and, depending upon the quality of your internet connection, you may experience some buffering (video stops briefly and starts again).

Download notes: For PC users, right-click the link, then select ‘Save Target As’ and download to the selected location on your computer. For Mac users, hold down Ctrl and click the link, then select ‘Save Target As’ and download to the selected location on your computer.

Les Burnett, Managing Partner of Francis Clark accountants
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi | Lo

Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

Louis Woodcock, CEO BDL Group
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi | Lo

Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

Peter DaCosta, Chairman, KPM UK Taxis
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi |
Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

Gita Patel, co-founder and managing director of Stargate Capital Management
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi
| Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

Mike Rainford, Head of Business Crime Unit for solicitors Burton Copeland
Download to Quicktime Player: Hi | Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:

Hi

Chris Gorman, serial entrepreneur
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi |
Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

David Lyons, Managing Director CG Bull & Taylor
Download to Quicktime Player:
Hi |
Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:

Hi

Sanjeev Mehan, CEO Visage Imports
Download to Quicktime Player: Hi | Lo
Stream using Windows Media Player:
Hi

Sphere: Related Content


Tell a Friend

May 24, 2007

Cold Stone Creamery Forms Franchise Conglomerate

Filed under: Top Business News — Carl @ 11:21 am


Cold Stone Creamery Forms Franchise Conglomerate

By: Tamara Schweitzer

The former Inc. 500 company is joining forces with Kahala, which manages Blimpie and 10 other franchise brands. Cold Stone Creamery, a former Inc. 500 company with more than 1,400 ice-cream shops worldwide, has merged with Kahala, a franchiser and developer whose brands include Blimpie and Ranch1, the companies announced Friday.

The merger creates Kahala Cold Stone, a holding company for 13 fast-food brands — including Cold Stone, Blimpie, The Great Steak & Potato Company, and Johnnie’s NY Pizzeria, among others — that generate more than $1.1 billion in system-wide sales, the companies said. The new partnership will comprise more than 3,000 franchisees and 4,600 retail locations in 15 countries worldwide. Both Cold Stone and Kahala are based in Scottsdale, Ariz. …
[MORE]

Sphere: Related Content


Tell a Friend

May 9, 2007

WORST FRANCHISE LOAN FAILURES

Filed under: Top Business News — Carl @ 10:51 am


Here are the worst 15 performing franchises in regards to having the highest Small Business Administration (SBA) loan failure rates. The list is dotted with sub sandwich shops, fitness centers and car shops.
 

 

WORST FRANCHISE LOAN FAILURES

Failure  %

1

 OBEE’S SOUP SALAD SUBS

55.56%

2

 LADY OF AMERICA

41.94%

3

 COUNTRY CLUTTER (BED & BREAKFAST)

41.18%

4

 COPY CLUB

36.36%

5

 ALL TUNE AND LUBE

35.71%

6

 PICKERMAN’S

35.71%

7

 PHILLY CONNECTION

35.59%

8

 ROLY POLY ROLLED SANDWICHES

34.78%

9

 COTTMAN TRANSMISSION

34.48%

10

 HAIR COLOR EXPRESS

33.33%

11

 LEE MYLES AUTOMOTIVE TRANSMISSIONS

33.33%

12

 GODFATHER’S PIZZA

33.33%

13

 SMOOTHIE FACTORY

33.33%

14

 BLIMPIE

31.39%

15

 GOLF U.S.A. (RETAIL GOLF EQUIP.)

30.77%

Source: Small Business Administration, SBA Loan Performance Within Franchise Code for the Period of FY 2001 - 2005

 

Sphere: Related Content


Tell a Friend

May 7, 2007

The AAFD Awards Cuppy’s Coffee Franchise with Contract Accreditation!

Filed under: Top Business News, FranchiseBusiness.com News! — Carl @ 11:15 am

The AAFD Awards Cuppy’s Coffee Franchise with Contract Accreditation!

Los Angeles - The American Association of Franchisees and Dealers (AAFD) announced today that Cuppy’s Coffee & More, Inc. (Cuppy’s) has been added to the AAFD’s roster of companies earning AAFD Accredited Contract status. This special distinction is available to recognize new franchise systems, or new ownership and management teams, whose franchise agreements substantially conform to the AAFD Fair Franchising Standards, but that lack operating history to evaluate franchise relationships.

Cuppy’s is a specialty coffee drive thru franchise business that offers coffee, lattes, espresso and smoothie drinks. Cuppy’s is a new brand that is arising from the ashes of a much troubled brand known as Java Jo’z. As part of its response to rebuff suggestions that its new ownership is still connected to Java Jo’z problems, Cuppy’s management has committed itself to a collaborative franchise culture that adopts high standards of mutual respect between franchisor and franchisees.

Cuppy’s franchise agreement earned nearly perfect score of 99.5% conformity with the AAFD Fair Franchising Standards, the highest grade ever achieved. Cuppy’s Coffee & More, Inc. is a Texas corporation wholly owned by Mr. Doug Hibbing and is headquartered in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Medina Enterprises, Inc., an affiliated company which is owned by Mr. Robert Morgan, is the contractor for the system’s restaurants and other units, as well as a provider of office and staffing services to Cuppy’s.

In May 2006, Medina acquired some of the Java Jo’z assets, including the Java Jo’z brand, which was later assigned to Cuppy’s. The Java Jo’z brand was confronted with major issues regarding Trademark ownership, allegations of unfulfilled contracts and personal problems of its prior owner. Cuppy’s new management team assessed that the myriad of inherited problems required a radical approach to change. That approach involved re-branding, a fresh start on training and support, and most importantly a fresh start with its franchisee community. Cuppy’s intends to build its new brand on a foundation of respect for the AAFD’s vision of Total Quality Franchising, and Cuppy’s management has committed itself to a collaborative franchise culture, and one that sets a new standard of mutual respect between franchisors and franchisees.

Doug Hibbing, the President of Cuppy’s Coffee is excited about the AAFD Accreditation, he states, “we are committed to support our franchisees, we have great products, and a great staff. Our primary goal at Cuppy’s is to build a business with a reputation for integrity; the AAFD Accreditation is a giant step in that direction.”

AAFD Chairman, Robert Purvin praised Cuppy’s Coffee for setting a new standard in fair franchising agreements, "Cuppy’s Coffee has demonstrated its commitment to fair franchising, the AAFD is delighted to welcome Cuppy’s Coffee to its list of Accredited Franchises.”

The story of Cuppy’s is a testament to the AAFD’s efforts to improve the franchising community and to reward Total Quality Franchising practices. The management team of Cuppy’s showed unprecedented willingness to accept the recommendations of the AAFD’s Fair Franchising Standards Committee.

About the AAFD: The AAFD is a national non-profit trade association representing the rights and interests of franchisees and independent dealers throughout the United States. Formed in 1992, the AAFD is focused on market driven reform to achieve its mission to define and promote collaborative franchise cultures that the AAFD describes as Total Quality Franchising. Since its formation the AAFD has grown to represent more than 50,000 franchised businesses throughout the United States. The AAFD currently has members in all 50 states and represents more than 100 different franchise systems. The AAFD’s Fair Franchising Standards, Fair Franchising Seal, Trademark Chapters, and emphasis on Marketplace Solutions led to the Association’s recognition as a growing force in franchising. The AAFD Purchasing Co-op and e-Commerce Marketplace add a new dimension to the value of AAFD membership. The AAFD’s Branded Partner Program provides a broad range of member services designed to help franchisees build market power, create legislative support of interest to franchisees, provide legal and financial support, and provide a wide range of general member benefits. For more information about the AAFD, please call toll free - 800-733-9858 or visit www.AAFD.com.

Sphere: Related Content


Tell a Friend
« Previous PageNext Page »