Small business owners have entered
2018 with many questions about how big their tax bills will be, but they’re
also optimistic about profiting from a strong economy. And aside from financial
matters, owners with employees must stay mindful about one of the troubling
issues of 2017, sexual harassment.
Here are five things small business
owners need to know about or do in 2018:
TAXES
The
new tax law changes rates for many small business owners, whether they are sole
proprietorships, partnerships or corporations. But the benefits aren’t across
the board: Some owners will lose out on savings because they’ll end 2018 with
income above thresholds set out in the law, or they work in fields such as
accounting, law or consulting.
Many
business owners aren’t sure yet how the law will affect them. Although
accountants and other tax professionals may have given owners some general
ideas about the impact, the IRS must still write regulations that will spell
out what taxpayers can do under the law and how they must comply.
Some
things are known. The Section 179 deduction that small businesses can use to
get an immediate break on purchases of equipment ranging from computers to
vehicles to manufacturing equipment doubles this year to $1 million.
And
separate from the tax bill, the IRS has set the standard mileage rate for
business use for a car at 54.5 cents per mile, up 1 cent from 2017. The rate is
one of two methods for accounting for how much an owner spent on using a car
for business; the second is to deduct the actual expenses for the car. Under
the actual expense method an owner must calculate the percentage of miles the
car is driven for business, and apply that percentage to expenses like lease
payments, fuel, maintenance, repairs, insurance and depreciation.
THE
ECONOMY
If
the economy maintains the robust expansion it showed in 2017, owners’ profits
and their optimism should grow as well. But that may not translate into more
jobs.
In
multiple surveys last year, owners indicated they’re generally sticking to
their conservative hiring patterns. Job creation plans ticked higher in a
fourth-quarter survey by researchers at Pepperdine University’s Graziadio
School of Business and Management and Dun & Bradstreet Corp., with 42
percent of small business owners saying they’d add one to two staffers in the
next six months, up from 38 percent in the third quarter.
Owners
have said a significant revenue increase might persuade them to hire. For many,
that could depend on whether consumer spending remains strong. The government’s
figures on retail sales and consumer spending show Americans were feeling fine
about spending as 2017 ended, a sign that business will be good in the new
year. Retail sales rose 0.8 percent in November after a 0.5 percent gain in
October, according to the Commerce Department. Overall consumer spending rose
0.6 percent in November after rising 0.2 percent in October.
Many
small businesses are dependent on consumers, among them restaurants, retailers
and service providers like hair salons. Consumers may feel like spending if the
stock market extends its big 2017 advance; the Dow Jones industrial average
rose 25 percent, giving many people with 401(k)s and other accounts a stronger
sense of financial well-being.
Unpredictable
events such as blizzards and hurricanes can hurt spending, and slow the
economy. But if consumers regain their confidence quickly, small businesses are
likely to shrug off any dips.
HEALTH
CARE
Most
companies’ health care plans are set for 2018, but there will be some changes
when it comes time to choose policies that begin later this year or in 2019.
Owners
who want to sign up for group insurance through the government’s Small Business
Health Options Program, or SHOP, now must do so through a health insurance
agent or broker or directly through an insurance company. They’re no longer
able to sign up through the government website, www.healthcare.gov. However,
they can visit the site to get information.
The
new tax law has ended the requirement that individuals buy health insurance
starting in 2019. Some very small business owners had stopped offering health
plans when the Affordable Care Act was enacted because their staffers were able
to get coverage through health insurance exchanges. While businesses with fewer
than 50 employees aren’t required to offer insurance, some may find their
staffers are interested in group coverage.
SEXUAL
HARASSMENT
Human
resources experts usually advise business owners to update their employee
handbooks early in the year. It’s a task that’s more of a priority at many
companies this year following a series of reports of workplace sexual
harassment.
“Every
employer should have a policy in their handbook that makes clear that sexual
harassment is not welcome and that defines sexual harassment,” says Jay
Starkman, CEO of Engage PEO, an HR provider based in Hollywood, Florida.
Owners
can find templates for sexual harassment policies online. Whether they’re
creating a policy for the first time or already have one, they should have it
reviewed by an HR professional or an attorney with expertise in sexual
harassment or employment law.
Companies
may also want to consider training sessions to educate staffers and managers
about harassment — what it is, how to recognize it, how to report it to owners
or senior executives.
Owners
who don’t have employee handbooks should think about creating them. Besides
harassment policies, they should contain the company’s policies on
discrimination, discipline, vacations, performance reviews, ethics and use of
company computers, among many other issues. They should also include
information on benefits. Owners can find templates online.
MINIMUM
WAGE RISES
Eighteen
states have higher minimum wages as of Dec. 31, 2017, or Jan. 1.
Laws
were passed boosting the wage floor in 10 of those states: Arizona, California,
Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and
Washington state.
Eight
states see increases because their minimums are tied to the inflation rate.
They are Alaska, Florida, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, Ohio and
South Dakota.
Small
businesses such as restaurants or food service companies are most likely to now
be paying their workers more under the higher minimums. Three-fifths of all
workers paid at or below the federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour are in the
leisure and hospitality industries. Almost all of those are restaurants or food
service businesses, according to the Department of Labor.
Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
0 comments:
Post a Comment