Originally posted by: Bowfinger
Originally posted by: charrison
If you cant realize that taxes are a cost of doing business and they are factored into sales cost, you are naive.
You might be correct
if we were discussing property taxes, VAT taxes, or similar "fixed" taxes paid by the company. We are not. Income (i.e., profit) taxes are levied against
profits. They reduce profits.
Unless the company is incompetently managed, it is already selling those products which will produce the highest profits, and it is already charging the highest prices the market will bear. It cannot raise prices without hurting sales, and therefore reducing profits. It will not switch to other products since it is already pursuing its most profitable business opportunities.
Companies may choose to play tax games to shield profits from taxes, e.g., setting up off-shore front companies. This doesn't increase the price of the companies' products, but it does shift tax burden to consumers and honest companies.
The simple fact is that business income taxes are primarily "paid" by owners/investors in the form of reduced return on investment. If that's not satisfactory, their option is switching to other investments, either non-equity investments (bonds, precious metals, etc.), or, if taxes are not evenly applied to all industries, other kinds of businesses that receive more favorable tax treatment. This is, in fact, exactly what we see happening. Industries with preferential tax treatment generate higher margins, thus increasing the value of their stock somewhat. Industries heavily taxed earn smaller margins, and are therefore less valuable to investors.
In short, business income taxes do not affect
product prices nearly as much as they affect
stock prices, especially when some industries receive preferential tax treatment (a/k/a, corporate welfare of one form or another).