In the United States, most large businesses are organized as corporations. A corporation is a specific legal
form of business organization, chartered by one of the 50 states and treated under the law like a person.
Corporations may own property, sue or be sued in court, and make contracts. Because a corporation has legal
standing itself, its owners are partially sheltered from responsibility for its actions. Owners of a corporation
also have limited financial liability; they are not responsible for corporate debts, for instance. If a shareholder
paid $100 for 10 shares of stock in a corporation and the corporation goes bankrupt, he or she can lose the $100
investment, but that is all. Because corporate stock is transferable, a corporation is not damaged by the death or
disinterest of a particular owner. The owner can sell his or her shares at any time, or leave them to heirs. The
corporate form has some disadvantages, though. As distinct legal entities, corporations must pay taxes. The
dividends they pay to shareholders, 46
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