Your Right to Own a Business and Exercising This Right
Wednesday, July 26th, 2006In Canada, the US, and other countries with strongly capitalist economics you have a right that doesn’t get as much attention in the press as “freedom of speech” or “freedom from unwarranted search and seizure”. Yet it’s quite well protected and one of the few paths to wealth. The right to start a business allows you to sell goods or services with minimal government imposed barriers, to run it as you see fit, and to own the risk and profit associated with the business (minus taxes of course). In other words, you have the freedom to come up with a great idea and to capitalize on it for your own personal gain.
There is a strong myth in employee circles that starting a business is a complicated and difficult process, but a big part of what makes the above a right is minimal government imposed barriers to exercise it! Anyone capable of fulfilling some basic tax requirements and perhaps filing a few forms can be up and running as a true blue business. In Canada we have the concept of “incorporation as of right” which allows anyone who properly fills out an application, pays a reasonable fee, and meets some basic requirments, to incorporate their business. Starting a corporation in the US is similiarly simple, and in both countries it’s even easier to start a sole proprietorship.
Why virtually everyone should have some form of business, even if you plan on working for someone else for the rest of your life.
For starters it’s an amazing right to have. Never has it been easier to go from being poor to wealthy through one’s own ingenuity and hard work, rather than needing to be born or married into the right economic class. Not being wealthy no longer means that you are required to become a servant or employee, surrendering the bulk of the value of your efforts to your owner (see: Is it Wrong to be an Employee? and Steve Pavlina’s 10 Reasons You Should Never Get a Job). Yet that’s exactly what most people are doing, locking themsleves into being peasants of a modern feudal system!
Running a profitable business greatly reduces your risk of losing your income. It’s no secret that layoffs happen all the time and high performance or seniority are no longer enough to save you if you happen to be working for a department that is bleeding money. You can literally walk into work one day and find out that you no longer work there, as I’ve done before. Since you aren’t required to spend a certain amount of time on a business in order to own it, you can gain the income benefits of a part-time business without quitting your day job. I’m not telling you that you must jump off the cliff by quitting your job immediately and hoping that you know how to fly. You are free to build your business gradually and cut the shackles of your day job when it’s sustainable, or forever keep it as a side venture.
Starting a business provides enormous tax advantages. You are not taxed on the money spent by the business, allowing you to leverage the full power of your capital. This means that if you’re income tax is 30% a year, it will cost you $100 to buy a $70 golf club or $70 worth of stock. That same $100 can be used to buy a $100 piece of equipment for your business. Rather than having to give that $30 to the government, you’ve been able to invest it in your own venture for your own gain. Better still, business losses can often be written off against other income, dampening the hardship caused by a business that is not yet profitable.
Your talents and passions aren’t limited to what your job requires. You may even feel that your existing job doesn’t make use of your talents at all, and you certainly wouldn’t be alone. Your business allows you to profit on these talents, providing both income and an opportunity to develop yourself further in these areas. I wouldn’t know nearly as much as I know now about website development or programming if I hadn’t started businesses that allowed me to put these skills to use. I certainly wouldn’t be able to write this blog on entrepreneurship, which has allowed me to gain many insights into my own business knowledge and to develop my long-neglected writing abilities.
Finally as mentioned above, business is one of the few paths to becoming wealthy. No matter how many raises you get at the end of the day, a pay cheque has very finite growth limits. Reaching $100 000 per year is an applauded accomplishment and a mere $300 000 per year is astronimical. True money comes from ownership, which is why the real value of the money you save each year comes from the returns you receive from having it invested (and you are saving, right?). Own your own business, own real estate, own shares of a corporation. Those who do have $300 000 pay cheques are millionaires because they’ve invested the cash, not because it’s all piling in a bank account. Never has it been so easy to become an owner and to reap the tremendous rewards that come with it. A business is a powerful vehicle for getting there and the accessibility of starting one is phenomenal.
Just How Much of a Right is This Really?
Every country has its own laws, but those that have embraced free enterprise based economies necessarily need to make it possible to start a business easily. You can’t have free enterprise otherwise. Nevertheless every right can be revoked for fair or unfair reasons, and as part of this article I unsuccessfully tried to find out what kind of situations would deny a citizen from starting a (legal) business. I would be interested in any insights from readers who are more familiar with the law and government.
Disclaimer: some or all of this information may not apply for your particular situation. I’m not a lawyer, accountant, or otherwise able to provide advice to guarantee a successful or legal business. Please seek appropriate counsel in your local area. Persons acting on any information on this website do so at their own risk.




