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Forms of Farm Business Organization Chapter 14

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Discuss the organization and characteristics of each form of business. ... Cattle feeding. 24. Corporations. A separate legal entity. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Forms of Farm Business Organization Chapter 14


1
Forms of Farm Business Organization(Chapter 14)
2
Objectives
  • Discuss the organization and characteristics of
    each form of business.
  • Show how income taxes are affected by the form of
    the business.
  • Discuss the factors to be considered when
    selecting a form of business organization.
  • Transferring the income, ownership, and
    management of a farm business from one generation
    to the next.

3
3 Most Common Forms of Farm Business
  • 1997 U.S. Census of Agriculture
  • Sole proprietorship 86
  • Partnership 9
  • Corporation (family held) 4
  • Other 1
  • Cooperatives, institutional or non-family
    corporations, limited liability companies

4
Farm Business Organization
  • Depends On
  • Size.
  • Number of people involved.
  • Career stage age of operators.
  • Owners desires for passing it on to the next
    generation.
  • Life cycle.

5
Life Cycle
  • Four Stages
  • Entry
  • Growth
  • Consolidation
  • Exit

6
Life Cycle
  • Entry Stage
  • Choosing farming as a career.
  • Selecting enterprises.
  • Acquiring and organizing resources.
  • Establishing a financial base.

7
Life Cycle
  • Growth Stage
  • Expansion by internal growth
  • Purchasing and leasing additional land.
  • Increasing the scale of the livestock enterprise.
  • Merging is another means of growth.

8
Life Cycle
  • Consolidation Stage
  • Debt reduction.
  • Increased efficiency is preferred to increased
    size (when possible).
  • Planning and including the next generation.

9
Life Cycle
  • Exit Stage
  • Reducing risk.
  • Liquidating the business.
  • Transferring property to the next generation.
  • Size may decline by selling long term assets.
  • Income taxes and retirement income must be
    considered.
  • Equitable treatment to all the heirs.

10
Sole Proprietorships
  • Most common.
  • Easy to form.
  • Relatively easy to operate.

11
Sole Proprietorships
  • Organization and Characteristics
  • Owner Business
  • Owns and manages the business.
  • Assumes all the risks.
  • Receives all profits and losses.
  • Responsible for success or failure.
  • No legal procedures, permits, or licenses.
  • No limit to size or number of employees.

12
Sole Proprietorships
  • Advantages
  • Simple
  • Freedom
  • All profits belong to owner.
  • Flexible
  • Disadvantages
  • All responsibilities
  • Personally liable
  • Limited capital
  • Smaller size
  • Difficult to compete
  • Insufficient time and management skills.
  • Poor continuity

13
Sole Proprietorships
  • Income Taxes
  • Owner pays income taxes on any profits.
  • Business profits and capital gains are added to
    any other taxable income.
  • Income is subject to self-employment taxes
    (Social Security and Medicare).

14
Joint Ventures
  • Two or more operators combine their abilities
  • Operating agreements
  • Partnerships
  • Corporations
  • Limited liability companies
  • Cooperatives

15
Operating Agreements
  • Typically informal for a short duration
  • Two or more sole proprietors work together on
    some farming activity.
  • Generally pay their own ownership costs.
  • Operating expenses may be shared
  • Usually in the same proportion as fixed costs.
  • Share income in the same proportion as total
    resources are contributed.

16
Partnerships
  • A formal association of two or more persons who
    share the ownership of a business
  • General partnership
  • Limited partnership

17
General Partnerships
  • Three Basic Characteristics
  • Shared business profits and losses.
  • Shared control of property, with possible shared
    ownership of some property.
  • Shared management of the business.
  • Sharing arrangements should be outlined
  • in the partnership agreement.

18
General Partnerships
  • Oral partnership agreements are legal in most
    states, but are not recommended
  • Overlook important points.
  • People forget.
  • Income tax problems.

19
General Partnerships
  • Unless there is a written agreement most courts
    assume an equal partnership in everything.
  • Written agreements should include
  • Management
  • Property Ownership and Contribution
  • Sharing of Profits and Losses
  • Records
  • Taxation
  • Termination
  • Dissolution

20
General Partnerships
  • Factors that indicate a particular business
  • arrangement is legally a partnership
  • Joint ownership of assets.
  • Operation under a firm name.
  • A joint bank account.
  • A single set of business records.
  • Management participation by all parties.
  • Sharing of profits and losses.
  • A business arrangement may be a legal
  • partnership, even though a partnership was not
  • intended.

21
General Partnerships
  • Advantages
  • Easier and cheaper than a corporation.
  • Less records than a corporation.
  • Freedom.
  • Flexibility.
  • Disadvantages
  • Unlimited liability.
  • Any partner can act for the partnership in legal
    and financial transactions.
  • Poor continuity.

22
General Partnerships
  • Income Taxes
  • File an information income tax return reporting
    income and expenses.
  • Income from the partnership is reported by the
    individual partners on their personal tax
    returns.
  • Partnership Operations (see handout)

23
Limited Partnerships
  • At least one general partner
  • Can have many limited partners.
  • Limited partners
  • Cant participate in management.
  • Financial liability is limited to their
    investment.
  • Liability of general partners can extend to
    personal assets.
  • Common limited partnerships
  • Real estate development.
  • Cattle feeding.

24
Corporations
  • A separate legal entity.
  • A legal person, separate and apart from its
    owners, managers, and employees.
  • A corporation can
  • Own property.
  • Borrow money.
  • Enter into contracts.
  • Sue and be sued.
  • Family farm corporations are growing!

25
Corporations
  • Basic steps to create (seek professional help)
  • File a preliminary application with the
    appropriate state official.
  • Draft a pre-incorporation agreement outlining the
    major rights and duties of the parties.
  • Prepare the articles of incorporation and file
    with the proper state office.
  • Turn property and/or cash over to the corporation
    in exchange for shares of stock.
  • Shareholders meet to organize the business and
    elect directors.
  • Directors meet to elect officers, adopt bylaws,
    and begin business in the name of the corporation.

26
Corporations
  • Organization and Characteristics
  • Shareholders
  • Directors
  • Officers
  • Can be the same individuals.

27
Corporations
  • Shareholders
  • Own the corporation.
  • Direct affairs through elected directors.
  • Each shareholder has one vote per share of voting
    stock owned.

28
Corporations
  • Directors
  • Elected by shareholders.
  • Manage the business.
  • Set broad management policy.
  • Have a fiduciary responsibility.

29
Corporations
  • Officers
  • Elected by the board of directors.
  • Responsible for day-to-day operations.

30
Corporations
  • Two Types of Corporations
  • C Corporation
  • -Regular corporation.
  • S Corporation (Family Farm?)
  • -Tax-option corporation.

31
Corporations
  • Restrictions on S Corporations
  • Limited to 75 shareholders.
  • Shareholders can be individuals, estates, certain
    types of trusts. Other corporations cannot hold
    stock.
  • Only one class of stock. Voting rights may be
    different for some shareholders.
  • All shareholders must initially consent to
    operating as an S corporation.
  • Certain of earned income.

32
Corporations
  • Advantages
  • Limited liability
  • Pool resources
  • Specialized management
  • Obtaining credit
  • Continuity
  • Transferring ownership
  • Fringe benefits
  • Vehicles
  • Insurance
  • Disadvantages
  • Costly to form and maintain
  • Legal advice
  • Meetings
  • Double taxation
  • S corporations are taxed like a partnership

33
Corporations
  • Corporation Operation
  • Basically operated similar to a partnership.
  • Number of shares to be issued is decided by the
    stockholders.
  • Value of each share is the beginning equity
    divided by the number of shares to be issued.
  • Net income is distributed in the form of
    dividends.

34
Limited Liability Companies(LLC)
  • Resembles a partnership, but offers its members
    the advantage of limited liability
  • Creditors or others can pursue the assets of the
    LLC, but cannot pursue personal or business
    assets owned individually by members of the LLC.
  • Any number of members.
  • Ownership is distributed according to the fair
    market value of assets contributed.
  • Net farm income is passed on to members in
    proportion to their shares of ownership.

35
Limited Liability Companies(LLC)
  • Advantages
  • Limited liability for investors.
  • Less time to form than a corporation.
  • Simple
  • Flexible
  • Disadvantages
  • Cant deduct cost of fringe benefits.
  • Poor continuity.
  • New
  • Limited legal precedence.

36
Cooperatives
  • A special type of corporation formed to
  • Obtain inputs or services.
  • Market products jointly.
  • Engage in farm production.
  • The key is a true desire to cooperate!

37
Cooperatives
  • Traditional Characteristics
  • Limited liability.
  • Net income is passed on to members before
    taxation.
  • Provide tax deductible benefits to owner/members.
  • Maximum return payable is 8.
  • Remaining net income is distributed to members as
    patronage refunds, based on amount of business.
  • All members have one vote.

38
Transferring the Farm Business
  • Important Questions for Family Business
  • Is the business large enough to productively
    employ another person or family?
  • Is the business profitable enough to support
    another operator?
  • Can management responsibilities be shared?

39
Key Areas to Transfer
  • Income
  • Ownership
  • Management

40
Key Areas to Transfer
  • Income
  • Pay the new operator a wage and/or return to
    asset contribution.
  • Bonus
  • Profit sharing

41
Key Areas to Transfer
  • Ownership
  • Saving breeding stock.
  • Investing in machinery.
  • Selling assets.
  • Gifting assets.
  • Careful estate planning.

42
Key Areas to Transfer
  • Management
  • Often the most difficult to transfer.
  • Give responsibility one enterprise at a time.
  • Allow younger operators to rent land to gain
    experience and learn management skills.

43
Stages in Transferring the Business
  • Testing stage of 2-5 years is often a good idea
    then
  • Spin-off.
  • Takeover.
  • Joint operation.

44
Stages in Transferring the Business
  • Spin-off
  • Operators separate into their own individual
    operations.
  • Can still trade labor or use of equipment.

45
Stages in Transferring the Business
  • Takeover
  • Older generation phases out of active labor and
    management.
  • Renting or selling to the younger generation.

46
Stages in Transferring the Business
  • Joint operation
  • Both generations wish to continue farming
    together.
  • Often involves expansion.
  • Crucial to have effective personal working and
    management relationships.

47
Alternatives for Farm Business Transfer
48
Summary
  • A farm or ranch business can be organized as a
    sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation,
    LLC, or cooperative.
  • The form of business organization depends on the
    size of the business, stage of its life-cycle,
    and the desires of the owners.
  • The right form of business can make transferring
    farm income, ownership, and management to the
    next generation easier.
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