Dee Schutte, executive director of the Litchfield Chamber of Commerce, visits with House Minority Leader Kurt Zellers at the Session Priorities event. Governor Tim Pawlenty congratulates John M. Rivisto, president and CEO of Wells Concrete Company, on its new facility in Sartell. The plant has created 50 jobs in central Minnesota and will add another 100 jobs over the next five years. Minnesota legislative leaders share their priorities at the Minnesota Chamber’s annual Session Priorities event: (from left) House Minority Leader Kurt Zellers, House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, moderator Tom Hauser of KSTP-TV Eyewitness News; Senate Minority Leader David Senjem; Senate Majority Leader Larry Pogemiller. Governor Tim Pawlenty addresses nearly 1,600 business leaders and policy-makers at the Minnesota Chamber’s annual Session Priorities event, the largest legislative gathering of its kind. Michele Engdahl with Thomson Reuters, Eagan, receives an up-close look at a hog-producing facility – Baarsch Farms-Next Generation Pork, Inc. near Austin – as part of Leadership Minnesota. The Minnesota Chamber program is an exclusive look at the state’s changing economy and the issues that will shape its future. Grow Minnesota! events help businesses prepare for the economic recovery. Sharing their perspectives on how the recession has changed the job market were (from left) Simon Foster of SpencerStuart, Minneapolis; Sue Metcalf of Ecolab, St. Paul; and Jan Erickson of Medtronic, Inc., Fridley.

Alternative Business Tax

Issue

How should Minnesota businesses be taxed? Is Minnesota's business tax system out of date? Should Minnesota adopt a business activity tax, a business entity tax or a gross receipts tax?

Policy

At present, Minnesota C-corporations pay the corporate income tax while S-corporations, partnerships, sole proprietors and limited liability companies flow business income through a personal income tax return. A business activity tax (BAT) is a tax paid by all businesses regardless of their legal status – C-corporations, S-corporations, partnerships, sole proprietorships, etc. Its tax base generally includes compensation, the value of employee benefits, other taxes paid and net income. Deductions could include capital expenditures and a standard exemption. A BAT also includes an apportionment formula for determining how much of a multistate business's activity should be allocated to Minnesota.

A business entity tax (BET) also is paid by all types of businesses. The tax base is federal gross income plus the cost of goods sold less pass-through income – income from partnerships, S-corporations and limited liability companies. This amount is apportioned based on the percentage of a firm's Minnesota sales to total sales. Unlike a business activity tax, there is no standard exemption or a capital expenditure deduction.

A gross receipts tax operates by taxing all receipts of a business, occurring every time a product changes ownership during all stages of production and distribution. The tax is usually transferred to customers through higher prices for goods and services or to owners/shareholders through lowered returns for businesses.

Minnesota should not enact a BAT or a BET. Our opposition is based on the following reasons:

  • Without a significant reduction in the overall level of business taxes, replacing some or all of the state's current business taxes with a BAT or BET would likely create many winners and losers within the business community.
  • The largest component of the BAT base is generally compensation. As such, it is primarily a tax on labor and could discourage employment in the state.

The Chamber opposes the enactment of a gross receipts tax. These taxes often favor larger enterprises over smaller ones by encouraging vertical integration, and they favor out-of-state businesses that do not pay these taxes because their product prices will not reflect these built-in costs. Gross receipts taxes are not economically neutral because they distort economic decisions made by individuals and businesses. Finally, gross receipts taxes lack transparency, and they do not reflect an ability to pay for government services.

Business Impact

The impact of enacting a business activity tax or a business entity tax is difficult to determine. It depends on whether a business is capital or labor intensive, how it is structured (i.e., C-corporation, partnership, S-corporation, etc.), what taxes are reduced or eliminated to offset a BAT or BET, and whether there was a revenue neutral change.

In 2005, the BAT study authorized by the Legislature was released. It concluded that, in 1999, eliminating the corporate income tax and substituting a business activity tax with a rate of 0.71 percent would reduce the taxes of about 20,000 C-corporations, 4,800 S-corporations and 7,800 partnerships. It also would increase the taxes of about 26,500 C-corporations, 52,700 S-corporations, 23,500 partnerships, 420,500 sole proprietors, 84,400 farmers and 169,600 taxpayers with rental income.

Enacting a gross receipts tax would be detrimental to Minnesota's business climate. Small and midsize businesses would struggle – more than they already do – to compete with larger firms that have more resources and capacity to vertically integrate their businesses, as well as handle increased costs during production. Moreover, Minnesota businesses that compete in other states and countries would be at a competitive disadvantage compared to similarly situated companies in other states that do not have to pay a gross receipts tax. These taxes distort private-market decisions and provide disincentives for growth and development.

This web site is developed and owned by the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce. Any use or reprinting is strictly prohibited without prior consent of the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce.