Utah Corporate Franchise Tax Data
The data in this publication give a fairly complete picture
of the corporate franchise tax. Corporate income taxes are not only complicated
by their logic, but also by their timing. The data reported in this report
represent a snapshot of how the data stood for 2000 in early 2002.
The detailed data in this report includes only data from C
corporations, but the financial data in the historical section also includes
other types of income in the corporate system, mainly S corporations.
A
TECHNICAL DATA DESCRIPTION
For the majority of this report, the data is "Utah
apportioned data," meaning that it has been multiplied by a factor that
determines the Utah portion of a national figure for tax purposes. (More on
apportionment will be found later.)
Since Utah has a minimum tax payment of $100 per taxable unit, some taxpayers pay a
tax independent of their incomes. For this reason, we have divided the data
into those that are minimum taxpayers and those that really are income-based
payers.
We have reported some data by income class. The income used
is "Utah taxable income. " For those who pay the minimum
tax, we only have two divisions: those with no income (zero or less), and those
with positive income. Those with positive income will generally have income
less than $2,000. Multiple corporations that file together, however, can be
minimum taxpayers, even with income over $2,000. For reasons of disclosure we
have not reported their income in a more detailed way. (Examining the data
tables will make this clearer.)
We have also reported the data according to a very broad
sector breakdown. In this presentation, the income classes are larger for
disclosure reasons. The "no income”, "positive income," and
“detailed income” classes have the same meaning as above.
In the data on apportionment, the income category is before
apportionment, and the factors are weighted averages for class
members, weighted by income before apportionment.