1 / 11

Business Forms

Business Forms. Sole Proprietorships, Partnerships, Corporations. Sole Proprietorship. Sole Proprietorships—a business owned and managed by a single individual . 75% of all businesses are sole proprietorships. They generate 6% of all US sales. Employ many people. Advantages.

oliana
Télécharger la présentation

Business Forms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Business Forms Sole Proprietorships, Partnerships, Corporations

  2. Sole Proprietorship • Sole Proprietorships—a business owned and managed by a single individual. • 75% of all businesses are sole proprietorships. • They generate 6% of all US sales. • Employ many people.

  3. Advantages • Easy to start up. • Relatively Few Regulations: subject to health codes and zoning laws. • Sole Receiver of Profit: the owner gets to keep all profits after paying income tax. • Full Control: they are their own boss. Can also respond quickly to changes in the marketplace. • Easy to discontinue: no legal obligations besides paying debt.

  4. Disadvantages • Constrained financial resources • Only one person • Banks more hesitant to loan money to a SP than other forms of business • Limits growth potential • Unlimited Liability—biggest disadvantage • The owner’s PERSONAL assets are at risk • If the business fails and stills owes money the SP may be forced to liquidate personal assets to cover debt • Lack of management specialty—the owner must make all decisions he/she may not be qualified to make • Lack of permanence—the owner dies the SP is dissolved

  5. Corporation • Corporation—legal entity, or being. It can acquire resources, take on debt, extend credit, sue and be sued. Owned by stock holders • About 20% of all US businesses are formed this way • Account for about 90% of US sales

  6. Advantages for the Corporation • Can raise money by either selling bonds or stock • Selling bonds is borrowing money from ppl and NOT giving up part ownership of the corporation • Issuing NEW stock also raises money but it also requires corp. to give up part ownership. • Selling bonds or stock make it easier to expand business than SP • Corp. “owners” do not run the firm on a daily basis. They hire others to do so and increase management specialty • Easy to sell investment

  7. Advantages of Corp (cont.) • Long life—corporation does not cease to exist when owners do • Limited liability—stock holders can only lose what they invest

  8. Disadvantages • Hard and expensive to start-up • S-corps are far easier and cheaper to start up and give ppl limited liability but limit the number of shareholders • Double Taxation—firm pays tax on income (money is taxed once). Then stockholders, who may receive dividends, have to pay tax on dividends as well (the same money is taxed again). • More regulation—Financial regulations and minimum wage

  9. Types of Partnerships • General—share equally in both responsibility and liability. • Limited Partnership—only one partner has unlimited liability. The others are “silent partners” and only invest money. • Limited Liability Partnership—all partners have limited liability. Professionals (doctors, lawyers) often form LLP to shield partners from others’ liability.

  10. Advantages • Ease of Start-Up—inexpensive to establish. • Limited Regulation • Larger Pool of Capital—Partners bring more money than one person can. Can hire talented people b/c they can offer more than SPs. (Lawyers esp.) • Taxation—partners pay tax on profit. The business does not pay tax.

  11. Disadvantages • Unlimited Liability—Except in LLP, at least one partner can lose more than they invested including PERSONAL assets (vehicle, money, boat, etc) • Potential for Conflict—more ppl brings more opinions.

More Related