The Corporation

Sort By:
Page 3 of 50 - About 500 essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    C Corporation Case

    • 409 Words
    • 2 Pages

    a.) A C corporation has to report ordinary income or loss in the C corporation’s tax return. S corporations passes through its ordinary income or loss to the shareholders. The shareholders report those on their individual tax returns. b.) A C corporation has to report dividend income in its tax return and may claim a dividends-received deduction for the dividend income. Dividend income in S corporation is pass through to its shareholders and reported as a separate item. c.) Capital gains and losses

    • 409 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Since corporations are not physical things or people, it is very easy for them to avoid any kind of trouble. Corporations have become great at passing on their externalities to the public. An externality is an expense of any kind, whether it is something such as environmental damage or forcing people in an area to pay money for something, that a corporation forces the public to pay for while they privatize all profits. Corporations being externalizing machines fit in very well with their psychopathic

    • 1383 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Enron Corporation was one of the largest integrated natural gas and electricity companies in the world. It marketed natural gas liquids worldwide and operated one of the largest natural gas transmission systems in the world, totaling more than 36,000 miles. It was also one of the largest independent developers and producers of electricity in the world, serving both industrial and emerging markets. Enron was also a major supplier of solar and wind renewable energy worldwide, managed the largest portfolio

    • 884 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    The Corporation The 2003 Canadian film documentary, The Corporation, is about the modern-day corporation. It critiques that it is considered to be a person, but since it has so many disregards to the human well-being and only cares about making as much money as possible, if it were an actual person it would be considered a psychopath. The documentary starts off with showing the development of the contemporary business corporation, from beginning as a legal entity to then having the entitlement

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    In 2012, Eaton Corporation, a global power company, acquired Ireland based Cooper Industries, an electrical equipment supplier. Overall, this deal is expected to save Eaton $160 million in taxes by 2016. (Gilleard, 2012). With Corporate Inversions like this on the rise, it is projected that the United States Treasury could lose up to $19.5 billion dollars over the next 10 years. ( Sloan, Jeelani,Wahba,Casey & Jones, 2014). After the merger of Eaton and Cooper, Eaton’s 2013 effective tax rate was

    • 980 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Multinational Corporation

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages

    12-14-cent-an-hour for your hard work, imagine you work with toxic chemical glues, paints and solvents everyday. Multinational Corporation is a company that make and sells a product in more than one country. Sometime we called a ¡°transnational corporation ¡±. Multinational Corporation are harmful because of bad working condition, low wage and long hours, bad future and life. Multinational corporations are harmful because they have bad working conditions. According to Sweatshop Fact sheet, workers who work for

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Better Essays

    successful companies further their success by becoming a corporation. Microsoft, a technology company, is an example of a company that became a corporation and took advantage of its many benefits of becoming a one. Since the incorporation of Microsoft, many other companies have become a corporation to benefit from what it has to offer. The development of the popularity of incorporations as a business has grown over the years. Corporations have grown over the last 200 years. Jane Mallor, one of the

    • 2015 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Question 4. It is overwhelming how corporations have embedded a social responsibility in their mission statements and company objectives. This leaves us with one assertion that is that corporations do have some level of obligation towards society’s morality; however, the corporation itself is not a moral agent (Klaus M. Leisinger). The discussion that follows is about corporations being moral agents or otherwise; however I will reach a conclusion that corporations do have an obligation that extends

    • 1485 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    (a) “Nemawashi” is an agricultural metaphor. The idea is that before a farmer plants a seed, he should prepare the roots and the soil, so that the seed has the best chance of survival. It is a political process by which an unofficial understanding is reached before a final decision is made on a particular matter. “Nemawashi” is Bottom-up style decision making (middle management has the greatest influence on decision making). The Japanese are primarily concerned with harmoniously working out problems

    • 1826 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Modern day corporations display every one of the previously listed characteristics. Is it right that an institution, whose power now rivals that of the State that once created it to seek the better welfare of its citizens, display the psychological traits of a dangerous personality disorder? Many say no: there is a rising discomfort with the corporation and its pervasion into every sphere of human life and it is this uneasiness that has prompted many academics to further study the corporation and its

    • 2751 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Better Essays