Yes exactly the big boys have big advantage over little ones, reducing corp tax levels the playing field.
It also should come as no surprise that politicians of all stripes for years have been decrying this as an impediment to economic growth. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has proposed reducing the top rate from 35 percent (excluding state and local taxes, which raise the rate to 39 percent) to 15 percent. But even President Barack Obama has proposed a reduction to 28 percent. The only surprise, perhaps, is that the rate hasn’t budged, despite long-standing bipartisan support to reduce it.
The reasons for that are complicated. In fact, complications abound in the tax code, and that is the problem. Large corporations can hire a bevvy of attorneys to take advantage of loopholes and reduce their liabilities. Companies may deduct costs for retirement funds, health insurance, money earned on investments, research funds and the price of new equipment. Congress has carved out separate loopholes for some industries. Some large corporations pay an effective rate close to zero.
These complexities, both for personal income and corporate earnings, breed inequities and stifle innovation. They also, in a strange way, keep Washington from taking action to lower the rates.
www.deseretnews.com/article/865661631/In-our-opinion-No-reduction-of-corporate-tax-rates-despite-bipartisan-support.html?pg=all
