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						Your Money: Pay yourself first? Last is how small biz 
						often works
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		 [March 16, 2019]   
		By Beth Pinsker 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Everyone knows the 
		Golden Rule of business is to pay yourself first. But more than half of 
		small business owners are going months without pay - if they are taking 
		any at all.
 
 About a quarter of these entrepreneurs go two to six months without pay, 
		and another quarter have gone more than six months without salary, 
		according to a recent survey from Kabbage (http://kabbage.com), a cash 
		flow optimization platform.
 
 The small business payroll servicer Gusto (http://gusto.com) finds even 
		more ups and down for its clients. Data on 449 owners shared exclusively 
		with Reuters show that only a handful pulled any paycheck at all in 
		2018, and the size of the checks varied greatly, with the highest 
		amounts taken in summer.
 
 Average pay chart: https://tmsnrt.rs/2NWSnsR
 
 The biggest month for an owner's draw in 2018 was December, with 73 
		business owners taking checks, and a median check of $5,944, according 
		to Gusto spokesman Rick Chen. The lowest draws were in January, with 
		just 26 owners taking pay, for an average of just $1,991.
 
 
		
		 
		"It’s tough. People have to budget," said Mike Savage, a certified 
		public accountant (CPA) and chief executive officer of 1-800Accountant 
		(http://1800accountant.com), which offers financial services to small 
		business owners. "We encourage people to budget accordingly - plan for 
		the worst and hope for the best."
 
 GETTING BY
 
 Tony Hernandez, owner of Cienfuegos Cuban Cafe in Simi Valley, 
		California, is among those who have not taken a paycheck at all.
 
 Since he started his food business over three years ago, he has earned 
		tips, but otherwise it all goes back into the business. Some expenses, 
		like his car and gas, get billed through the company. His wife's job 
		covers living costs and provides health insurance for them and their two 
		kids.
 
 "I don’t know how else I would be able to do something like this without 
		my wife," said Hernandez, 46.
 
 For Hernandez, long-term planning is less about retirement than about 
		expanding to a second location, with the ultimate dream of a stall at 
		the Los Angeles airport.
 
 "The way I look at my business is: I’m fully invested in this to make it 
		work. That’s investing in my retirement," said Hernandez.
 
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			An employee of a bank counts US dollar notes at a branch in Hanoi, 
			Vietnam May 16, 2016. REUTERS/Kham 
            
			 
What keeps Joanne Sonenshine up at night has been the inability to plan. The 
42-year-old runs a partnership advisory company in Washington called Connective 
Impact that helps connect companies to investments with social impact. She 
regularly takes a salary, but often has to pause it, depending on when clients 
pay.
 The partial U.S. government shutdown at the beginning of the year was 
particularly crippling, because many of her clients depend on federal funding. 
Two big contracts disappeared suddenly.
 
 "A huge amount of money went up in smoke. I can’t catch up with that," said 
Sonenshine. "You start to worry if you can make it. There's the fear of failure, 
the fear of letting your family down. What happens if I can't pay my taxes? Will 
the IRS come after me?"
 
 NEW TAX LAW
 
 This is, indeed, a daunting year for small business taxes. The Tax Cuts & Job 
Acts passed in 2017 created a new 20 percent deduction for individuals earning 
business income - but the fine print is complicated. Those paying quarterly 
taxes in 2018 before all the rules were sorted out may have to make adjustments. 
That is on top of the difficulty of figuring out quarterly tax payments on 
fluctuating income.
 
 "With the new tax law, there's even more incentive for the self-employed 
entrepreneur to pay themselves less," said Savage, because they will avoid 
payroll taxes and other withholdings and boost their deduction.
 
 While more careful cash management may help control the symptoms, this may be 
one problem for which there is no cure. Most businesses run on small margins, 
and they are always expanding so as not to stagnate.
 
 "We'll always been chasing our tails, in effect," said Rich Patterson, who runs 
his own marketing company that makes custom products in Vancouver, Canada.
 
 Patterson, 48, had to pause his pay over the summer, when there was a worrisome 
lag. "I watch the sales figure really closely, and I knew we were having a good 
year. It didn’t seem to match up why we were having cash flow problems," 
Patterson said.
 
 The choice became paying himself and contributing to retirement or paying his 
staff. "Honestly, it’s just not possible to pay yourself first," Patterson said. 
"I wouldn’t be able to sleep at night if other people are losing out."
 
 (Editing by Lauren Young and Jonathan Oatis)
 
				 
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