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3.06B Select form of business ownership. 3.00 Acquire knowledge of business ownership to establish & continue business operations. Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of the most common types of business ownership. Objectives. Three basic forms of business ownership.
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3.06B Select form of business ownership 3.00 Acquire knowledge of business ownership to establish & continue business operations
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of the most common types of business ownership. Objectives
Three basic forms of business ownership Your choice depends on your needs & goals • Sole proprietorship • Partnership • Corporation
Sole proprietorship • A business owned and operated by one person.
Advantages of sole proprietorships • Easy and inexpensive to create. • Unless you need certification or local permits, government intervention is minimal • Owner makes all business decisions & has control over all aspects of the business. • Flexibility in scheduling to meet owner’s needs
Advantages of sole proprietorships cont. • Owner receives all profits. • Privacy – owner is the only one who knows details of the business • Secret ideas, formulas, or recipes • Ability to act quickly in making decisions – no checking with others
Advantages of sole proprietorships cont. • Tax advantages • Business itself pays no taxes • Taxes are paid as personal income of owner which is usually lower than corporate taxes • Many business expenses are deductible • Easy to close/dissolve • Pay employees and creditors • Sell your equipment • Notify customers if possible
Disadvantages of sole proprietorships • Owner has unlimited liability for all debts and actions of the business. • Unlimited liability: The debts of the business may be paid from the personal assets of the owner. • If you cannot pay business debt with business income, bill collectors can take your personal assets (home, car) • Difficult to raise capital. • Banks/lenders consider sole proprietorships to be a high-risk investment • Needs include paying employees, purchasing equipment & inventory, & running the business • Expansions can be delayed or halted causing you to lose business to your competition
Disadvantages of sole proprietorships • Sole proprietorship is limited by his/her skills and abilities. • Uncertain life • You are “it” – illness or injury that prevents you from working may cause you to close • Bankruptcy or incarceration will dissolve your business • The death of the owner automatically dissolves the business.
Partnership A form of business ownership in which two or more people share the assets, liabilities, and profits.
Advantages of partnerships • Fairly easy & inexpensive to start • May pay attorney if you develop a partnership agreement • Combined resources • Team with partners with different skills, experience, contacts, & capital • Sharing responsibilities makes business run more efficiently & smoothly • Increase the amount of capital to run the business. Lenders may be more willing to lend or extend credit • Decreased Competition • Combining like businesses will decrease or eliminate competition
Advantages of partnerships cont. • Reduced expenses • When two or more businesses combine expenses are no longer being duplicated • Ex. promotion, office space, supplies, utilities • Business losses are shared by all partners. • The partnership does not pay income tax on profits. • Each partner pays income tax on her/his individual share of the profit
Disadvantages of partnerships • Unlimited liability • Each owner in a general partnership has unlimited liability. • Each partner can lose personal assets to pay business debt • In a limited partnership, the liability is limited to the amount invested in the business • Limited Capital • Although partners may bring more capital to the business than sole proprietors, it is still limited to what each can contribute • Some lenders may still be reluctant to lend large amounts • Difficulty in ending • Withdrawing can be complicated if there is no written partnership agreement • By law profits must be divided equally if no agreement
Disadvantages of partnerships cont. • Partnerships may lead to disagreements. • May disagree on business goals, finances, responsibilities, & division of profits • Can affect the efficiency of the business, morale of employees, & success or failure of the venture • Developing a detailed partnership agreement often helps resolve the conflict because it addresses many issues that cause potential disagreements • In 1916, the U.S. government developed the Uniform Partnership Act (updated in 1997)which serves as a guide for legally formulating a general partnership agreement • A limited partnership is more formal & specific in nature & is governed by the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (ULPA)
Disadvantages of partnerships cont. • Uncertain life/Transferability • Unless specified in a detailed partnership agreement, bankruptcy, death & the withdrawal or admittance of a new partner dissolves the partnership • Remaining partners may start a new partnership if they have the money to buy the former partner’s share
Corporation • A business that is chartered by a state and legally operates apart from its owners. • Owned by stockholders who have purchased units or shares of the company
Types of corporations • C-corporation: The most common form of corporation. It protects the entrepreneur from being personally sued for the actions and debts of the corporation • Subchapter S corporation: A corporation that is taxed like a sole proprietorship or partnership. • Nonprofit corporation: Legal entities that make money for reasons other than the owner’s profit. Limited Liability Company (LLC):A form of business ownership that provides limited liability and tax advantages.
Advantages of corporations • Financial Power • Can raise money quickly by issuing shares of stock. • Because it is closely regulated by the government, financial institutions are more willing to lend larger amounts of capital • Limited Liability • Owners are liable only up to the amount of their investments. Personal assets cannot be used to pay business debt • Unlimited life • May exist indefinitely • The death or withdrawal of an owner/stockholder does not affect the life span of the corporation
Advantages of corporations cont. • Easy-to-transfer ownership • Ownership simply transferred by selling stock to someone else • New stock certificate is issued in the name of new stockholder. No permission is required by others • The business can hire experts to professionally manage each aspect of the business. • Can result in a more efficiently run organization
Disadvantages of corporations • Difficulty in forming & operating • Legal assistance is needed to start a corporation • Lawyer fees can be very expensive • Must request approval from the State & register the Articles of Incorporation • Decisions about value & class of stock & shareholder voting rights • Corporations are subject to more government regulations than partnerships or sole proprietorships. • Reporting & taxation requirements vary from state to state • Required to keep detailed reports for stockholders & to keep them informed of certain corporate transactions, meetings, & voting rights • New charter must be approved if corporate activities change
Disadvantages of corporations • Dual taxation • Corporation is taxed on profits from the company • Shareholders are taxed on the dividends they earn on their investments • Separate owners & managers • Stockholders are not generally involved in the day-to-day operation of the corporation • Stockholders form a board of directors to make decisions about the business & managers carry out these decisions • Separation of ownership & management provides more opportunity for irregularities or misunderstandings
Hybrid forms of Business Ownership • Limited Liability Company (LLC) • Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) • Both combine various elements of sole proprietorships, partnerships, & corporations into one package
Advantages of Hybrid Businesses • Cost to start & operate • Generally less expensive than corporations • No dual taxation - requires less paperwork & regulation • LLPs are designed for business professionals such as lawyers & doctors • Partners might need to carry a required amount of liability insurance • Limited Liability • Personal assets cannot be used to pay business debt • Owners (members) lose only what they have invested in the business if it fails
Advantages of Hybrid Businesses cont. • Taxation • LLCs & LLPs pay taxes on personal income-tax returns • Since they are not considered separate entities (like corporations) they are not subject to dual taxation • Combined resources • Often have more owners & tend to have a wider pool of financial resources, skills, talents, & contacts • Life span • Hybrids are required to dissolve after a specific time period • Depending on the state registered in, usually between 30 & 40 years • Owners can decide if they want to reorganize or let it dissolve
Advantages of Hybrid Businesses cont. • Flexibility • Number of members permitted in LLCs are unlimited • Sub S corporations must have 100 or fewer shareholders • Most states require only one member to establish a business as a hybrid • Members are permitted to run the company or to allow others to manage it • Membership changes do not automatically dissolve the company
Disadvantages of hybrids • Requirements & laws to establish & operate hybrids vary from state to state • Problematic for businesses that operate in more than one state • No universal guidelines from state to state • Verification of each state’s statutes can be costly