The corporate income tax — a tax levied on the profits of corporations — is a key part of America’s overall fiscal picture, representing the third-largest category of revenues for the federal government.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, enacted in December 2017, reduced the federal tax rate on corporations to 21 percent, a decrease of 14 percentage points from its previous level of 35 percent. However, many corporations pay far less than the statutory tax rate due to a range of tax expenditures, which include exclusions, exemptions, deductions, and credits that reduce total tax liability. Also known as loopholes or tax breaks, these expenditures add up to billions of dollars every year.
Revenues from corporate taxes have been declining as a share of the economy, in part as a result of lower tax rates but also tax avoidance generally. The United States collects fewer revenues from corporations, relative to the size of the economy, than many other advanced countries. Corporate taxation must be part of the consideration for how to shore up the nation’s fiscal outlook.
Below is a selection of key charts on corporate income taxes in the United States and how they fit within the federal budget.
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Further Reading
How Much Would It Cost to Make the TCJA Permanent?
Most of the individual tax provisions and a handful of business provisions in the TCJA are scheduled to expire in the next few years.
These Tax Expenditures Cost Billions More Than Anticipated — Here’s Why
The growing price tags demonstrate that the ultimate cost of a new tax break can be difficult to anticipate.
How Did the TCJA Affect Corporate Tax Revenues?
For the first few years after TCJA’s enactment, revenues from corporate taxes dropped sharply, but they returned to pre-TCJA levels starting in 2021.