Yes. Absolutely. Just not the big corps. The big corps had tools to mitigate, people to cut to throw red meat to the market, and products to hype about how efficient they are now, etc.
I don't know if Big Tech will re-staff. I suspect they might to a degree, but smaller software-focused firms absolutely will. If they are surviving, they are working with a much smaller staff and would jump at the chance to add more hands.
Section 174 has definitely been talked about a lot over the last few years, (even here on HN from time to time) but it's tax code details like this that never seem to make it above hype-fueled misrepresentations like "AI Is Taking All Software Jobs!"
Yes, it's a huge problem for small startups. Many of them went from not making revenue in the eyes of the IRS to being profitable and having massive tax bills. FAANG has the ability to move things around to their EU offices, but they also have the ability to spin it and do a layoff to help with their tax burden but also cover up issues like over-spending on projects like a shift to VR that didn't go anywhere, for example.
> Yes, it's a huge problem for small startups. Many of them went from not making revenue in the eyes of the IRS to being profitable and having massive tax bills.
Let's be clear: as a small startup this means that you went from not making any money (i.e. losing money), to losing slightly more money. It certainly sucks that you get a tax bill when you're not profitable [1], but the tax is still proportional to revenue, which for many early stage startups is small, and should be growing rapidly enough that the marginal investment in your meager R&D team is worth it. And if it isn't growing, you have bigger problems and probably shouldn't be hiring anyway. You budget for it and move on, just like you budget for anything else.
My point is that the rhetoric around this issue has made it sounds like your median founder is going to stop founding in the USA and go so somewhere else, but that's fairly silly. It isn't good to not be able to deduct salaries, but it's probably not a "massive" problem.
For the truly early stage startup it doesn't even merit consideration, because you're not making enough money for the tax to come close to a salary. US Corporate tax rate is 21%. Assuming that you aren't able to deduct anything at all, you'd have to be making $1M a year in revenue (real annual revenue, not theoretical extrapolated future revenue) to get close to a fully loaded engineer.
Where this definitely will hurt is in a large corporation that is bringing in billions of dollars in revenue, and employing many thousands of people in R&D. That's a real knock to the quarterly report, which can (and will) be found by cutting the fat -- of which there is a lot.
[1] and, to be clear, I think the change in rules are dumb and should be reverted.
> Let's be clear: as a small startup this means that you went from not making any money (i.e. losing money), to losing slightly more money.
That’s not how it’s playing out in reality at all. Are you lying or confused? Small groups working on government grants are getting hit with six figure tax bills. They aren’t undergoing a minor shift; this is something that will destroy many small businesses working on research specifically, if nothing else.
> That’s not how it’s playing out in reality at all.
The math is straightforward. You can make wild assertions all day long, but ultimately, you have to have significant revenues for this to matter on the margin.
> Small groups working on government grants are getting hit with six figure tax bills.
Setting aside the...let's say "rarity" of what you're describing -- small, for-profit groups applying for government grants (oy) as a startup -- for these orgs to truly be getting "six-figure tax bills", it means that they have to be making about half a million dollars a year in revenue (minimum), with no deductions at all.
I'm not saying that small startups aren't getting tax bills or that those bills don't suck; I'm saying that they don't explain industry wide hiring trends.
> Oh, you actually are just straight-up lying, or purposefully wallowing in ignorance.
Wow. I know I shouldn't reply, but:
1) That's about QSBS, not income tax.
2) QSBS is only relevant should your equity be liquid (i.e. IPO, sale, etc.) in the distant future (there's a 5-year holding period).
3) QSBS is only applicable to a fraction of startups anyway.
The section 174 change interacts with both things, but the reason people want to change it has nothing to do with QSBS, and everything to do with the fact that they cannot deduct expenditures in the current tax year.
Yeah, you probably shouldn’t respond if it’s continued lying.
See, you started off lying by pretending this isn’t actually affecting any businesses who doesn’t already make a ton of money (yes, I know you tried to slip by simply by saying “revenue” instead of “profit” as if that’s not the entire topic of discussion here).
Then you continued to lie by saying that the real world effects, which have been reported on plenty, simply don’t exist and are “wild assertions”.
I proved you wrong by showing how small businesses can lose an incredible benefit because this tax code change disqualifies many who SHOULDN’T be DQ’d, and now you’re lying by saying that this change, which is about making formerly tax-deductible things no longer tax-deductible and thus pushing you into scenarios where you have six figure tax bills, doesn’t count because nobody is REALLY talking about how qualified small businesses no longer can consider their QSB stock sales as tax deductible, thereby pushing them into a tax bracket where they might get a six figure tax bill.
Or, as I said previously, you’re still just ignorant and the source I provided was simply to esoteric to understand.
> I'm not saying that small startups aren't getting tax bills or that those bills don't suck; I'm saying that they don't explain industry wide hiring trends.
It's not having a wide effect on the industry as a whole right now, but it's creating a huge problem in the startup pipeline that will be apparent in 3-5 years. It's effectively strangling anyone who wants to bootstrap a startup.
Obviously industry trends are multivariate, but the way you're talking about this seems to indicate you are seriously disconnected from the finance side of tech startups. This is squeezing a very specific part of the startup pipeline, the transition stage of going from founder-led development to first engineer hires. It makes it much more capital intensive to make that jump because of Section 174. It's scaring away potential founders and making existing early stage startups go slower.
> the tax is still proportional to revenue, which for many early stage startups is small, and should be growing rapidly enough that the marginal investment in your meager R&D team is worth it
This may hold true for "moonshot" startups, but the tax would still devastate "small-business"/"lifestyle" startups, where cost ~= revenue.
Ada 95 was the first language taught in my college CompSci program back in 1999 (this might have even been my textbook).
Everyone would complain about Ada because no one had heard of it before, but looking back it was the right call. A great language to learn the basics on and not get in to trouble.
They’ve since moved to Java and now probably something else.
The Go example is a lot of comments right off the bat. To be clear, it’s good to comment your code, but maybe not when you are trying to look l33t on the cheap.
It started there initially because a bunch of hackers wanted to hang out together and the cheapest way to do that was to all fly in the Vegas in August. It’s tradition but also still somewhat true for the reasons you articulate.
I live close to Pickwick’s / Poor Richard’s Pub and my friend would always want to meet there for a beer. It’s a fine place, but with the amount of options in LA I figured he was an Office fan but after a few visits I asked him and he said “I’ve never really watched that show. Why do you ask?”
It made me laugh. I guess I’ve seen too many super The Office fans to just assume he liked this odd little pub on Ventura.
I'll edit the title.