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  2. How to Calculate a Business Owner’s Salary - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/calculate-business-owner...

    Ways to pay yourself as a business owner. There are two common ways small business owners can pay themselves in their business: Salary. With the salary option, you can pay yourself just as you ...

  3. Corporate tax in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_tax_in_Canada

    In 2020, when Alberta made a deep and rapid corporate tax rate cut, from 12%, which is the average provincial corporate tax rate, to 8%, University of Toronto economist, Michael Smart, cautioned that this could result in "Ontario-based companies booking profits in Alberta to pay lower tax rates—shades of the "Québec shuffle" that occurred in ...

  4. S corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S_corporation

    An S corporation (or S Corp), for United States federal income tax, is a closely held corporation (or, in some cases, a limited liability company (LLC) or a partnership) that makes a valid election to be taxed under Subchapter S of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code. [1] In general, S corporations do not pay any income taxes.

  5. Corporate tax in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_tax_in_the...

    This tax is imposed at the same rate as the tax on business income of a resident corporation. [72] The U.S. also imposes a branch profits tax on foreign corporations with a U.S. branch, to mimic the dividend withholding tax which would be payable if the business was conducted in a U.S. subsidiary corporation and profits were remitted to the ...

  6. Rollovers as business startups (ROBS): What they are and how ...

    www.aol.com/finance/rollovers-business-startups...

    As a business owner, you become an employee of the C corporation and the beneficiary under the new retirement plan. 4. Roll the funds from your existing retirement account into the new C corp’s ...

  7. Canadian corporate law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_corporate_law

    The Crown has employed the oppression remedy in its status as a creditor under the Income Tax Act, in order to set aside dividend payments that rendered a corporation unable to pay its tax liability. [65] [66] Where a company has made excessive salary payments to a controlling shareholder, a judgment creditor has been permitted to be a complainant.

  8. Economy of Ontario - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Ontario

    The Toronto-Dominion Centre in Toronto. The economy of Ontario is diversified.Ontario is the largest economy in Canada, making up around 38% of Canadian GDP. [1] [2] Though manufacturing plays an important role in Ontario's economy responsible for 12.6% of Ontario's GDP, the service sector makes up the bulk, 77.9%, of the economy. [3]

  9. Oppression remedy in Canadian corporate law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oppression_remedy_in...

    Provisions similar to s. 210 of the UK Companies Act 1948 were first introduced into Canadian law through the 1975 passage of the Canada Business Corporations Act. [1] It incorporated recommendations made in 1962 by the UK Jenkins Committee on Company Law for removing the linkage of the remedy with that of winding-up and for broadening its scope. [2]