User:CheshireKatz/Tax
http://www.ilrg.com/students/outlines/download/FederalIncomeTax-Georgetown-Pearlman-Fall2005.doc
http://www.ilrg.com/students/outlines/download/Federal_Income_Tax-Yale-Zolt-Fall2005.doc
Open book multi-choice exam. Practice '03: Pg.11 #61, AGI $900K
If problem describes wealthy TP, presume phaseout provisions will make them ineligible.
Income Tax Code subpage here.
Zolt subpage here.
Sections
[edit]106, 167, 183, 265, 274, 461, 1001, 1033, 1041, 1211
Income Tax in Brief
[edit]- Does taxpayer (TP) have income?
- Three definitions
- Eisner (capital or labor)
- Glenshaw Glass
- Haig-Smimons
- Three definitions
- Is it a gift? (Duberstein)
- Can I divide it into sticks of ownership / different rights (i.e., Inaja)
- Don’t do where impractical to apportion basis (as in settlement for polluted discharge in Inaja)
- Exclude fringe benefit
- Timing – is it income now?
- Need realization (§ 1001)
- Cash method – report when received (actually or constructively)
- Constructive receipt (§ 1341 / N. Am. Oil v. Burnet)
- Can’t contract away after you have them (but can contract before – See Olmstead)
- Need right to receive (see Amend)
- Economic benefit (Pulsifer)
- But must be technically set aside (See Olmstead)
- Constructive receipt (§ 1341 / N. Am. Oil v. Burnet)
- Accrual – report when accrued
- All events have occurred and amount determined with reasonable certainty (Reg. § 1.446-1)
- Open v. closed transaction
- Installment sale (take %)
- Is the income/expense capital or ordinary?
- Indopco – capitalize if longterm benefit unless ordinary – see PNC Bancorp
- Is it depreciable (§ 167)
- only depreciate off what you have (See Estate of Franklin – tried to depreciate off whole thing)
- What is the basis?
- Is there an applicable deduction?
- Business expenses (§ 162)
- Gilmore – must have origins in business (also primary purpose, but for test)
- Ordinary and necessary
- Prefer objective test (see Pevsner)
- Hobby losses (§ 183) (limited to profits) and investment (§ 212)
- 2% requirement
- Personal (e.g., medical, casualty, charitable)
- Is the TP eligible for credits?
- Do we want to tax this sort of transaction?
Three options: (1) tax; (2) don’t tax; (3) tax part
- NOTE: separate out transactions (e.g., Tufts)
- Is it administratively feasible to tax?
- Should the tax system try and tax such arrangements? (What would be the result of a rigid application of the rules?)
- Relevant rights
- right to exclude
- right to improve
- right of gain
- right of reversion
- benefit of use
- risk of loss
- Individual taxpayer's liability
- Gross Income (GI); § 61 – “all income from whatever source derived”
- Gross Income is the remainder of Compensation (C) after Basis (B)
- Certain Above the Line Deductions (ALD);
- Adjusted Gross Income (AGI);
- Standard or Itemized Below the Line Deduction (BLD)
- Personal Exemptions (PE)
- Taxable Income (TI)
- Tax Rates (TR); 10% to 35% for ordinary income; 5% to 28% capital gain
- Tentative Tax (TT)
- Tax Credits (TC)
- Tax Due (TD) or Tax Refund (TR)
What is income?
[edit]- Income does not include
- Loans
- Weekly carpool pot contributions
- Sale of assets for less than their basis
- Gain from sale of principal residence → §121(a)
- Rebates and discounts received after sale
- Employment benefits
- Qualified employee benefits → §132(a)
- No-additional-cost services in one's line of business → §132(b)
- Deminimus fringe benefits → §132(e)
- Qualified transportation fringes → §132(f)
- Employer provided medical coverage
- For oneself → §106(a)
- For one's spouse & dependents → §152(a)
- Profits from "good deals" on items prior to realization by resale
- Covered travel, food, & lodging costs pursuant to a business purpose
Class Notes
[edit]Vocabulary
[edit]Kinds of Taxes
[edit]- Income - [ Base(Taxable Income) x Rate = Income Tax ]
- Capital Gains - Different Rate than Income Tax
- Gifts - detached and disinterested generosity)
- Estates -
- Sales -
- Luxury - Excise tax (sales tax on selected items)
- Property -
- Tariff - Tax on importation of goods
- Head tax - Based on existence (everyone pays the same amount)
- Consumption Taxes (nothing more than an income tax that gives a deduction for savings)
- Rationale: If you're consuming more, you're in a better position to bear societal burdens
- Value-Added Tax VAT (Europe sales tax - collected along the way)
- National Sales (Flat) Tax
Income Tax Rates
[edit]- Proportional/Flat Rate – Fixed % for all; everyone pays the same proportion of income.
- Progressive Rate – As base goes up, you pay more tax in absolute dollars but the rate at which you are taxed increases. When you move to a different tax bracket, you pay marginal rates, not the entire %. Our income tax is progressive:
- 100,000 = 10%
- 100,001 = 20%
- 201,000 = 30%
- Regressive rate – the rate will go down as the base goes up
- Not really a good tax policy
- One major regressive tax – social security tax
- Nominal/marginal rate – dollar value is associated w/ particular rate. Eg. tax system w/ 2 rates of tax:
- 10% on first $20,000 of income
- 20% on anything above $20,000
- Effective rate – tax divided by total income – since some of dollars are taxed at less than highest rate, always lower than marginal rate
- Social security tax - is capped at a certain amount of income
Terms of Art
[edit]- Gross Income (GI) = All income from whatever source derived
- Above-the-Line Deductions (AtLD) = Everyone eligible, Mostly cost of earning, but also student loans, retirement, & health insurance
- Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) = GI minus AtLD
- Below-the-Line Deductions (BtLD) = Lower income eligibility, itemized (public policy-motivated) deductions or a standard (fixed) deduction.
- Personal Exemptions (PE) =
- Taxable Income (TI) = AGI - [BtLD (SD or ID) + PE]
- Defined as (1) undeniable accession of wealth (2) clearly realized (3) over which TP has complete dominion
- Gift = §1015
- Appreciation =
- Depreciation =
- Cost Basis = Your $ Value investment in property at time of purchase
- Fair Market Value = Dollar value of property at transfer
- Business-related expense (§162(a)) = An expense incurred, whether for one's own gratification or others, for which there exists evidence of a connection to a business purpose.
- §274(d) requires businesses to maintain adequate records of such expenses.
- §274(a) requires such expenses to be "directly related" to the taxpayer's business or precedes or follows a "bona fide business discussion."
How do we decide to raise revenue? → design criteria
- Change must raise enough money
- Change must be economically efficient
- Does it encourage/discourage economic growth?
- At some level, lower taxes lead to economic growth – further question is whether this difference is significant
- Lower taxes and higher growth don’t have a strong correlation – not supported by strong economic evidence
- Does change distort decision-making?
- Does it encourage/discourage economic growth?
- Change must be administrable
- Cost of collection v. benefit
- As rate increases, incentive to cheat increases – more policing effort needed
- Cost of collection v. benefit
- Change must be fair
- Benefit principle – what you pay ought to be proportionate to what you get in return from government
- Not used to rationalize the major taxes b/c judicial system, police protection, etc. are hard to measure
- But it comes up in popular political discourse on tax
- Not used to rationalize the major taxes b/c judicial system, police protection, etc. are hard to measure
- Ability to pay – typically we say people should pay in proportion to their ability – taxes is a way to proportion the common burdens of society (equal burden principle)
- Horizontal equity
- Tax should be the same for those in a similar standing
- Income makes it easy but addition of other bases (Home ownership, Medical expenses, etc.) makes it tough
- Tough to level the playing field in the same standing
- Vertical Equity
- Dissimilarly situated people should pay different tax
- Progressive tax is an attempt to create vertical equity
- Benefit principle – what you pay ought to be proportionate to what you get in return from government
Miscellaneous
[edit]Amending a return requires a "mere error," not a mistake of fact.
Structured settlements are better than lump sums for tax purposes b/c you end up not having to include the interest in income
- Valuable Rights to Income (Two doctrines)
- Economic Benefit: when moneys are accruing interest on your behalf even if not immediately accessible
- Constructive Receipt: when moneys are readily available for you with little obstacle
- Examples
- If a check written, even if it can't clear in the bank within this year, EB & CR
- If invited to come in & have a check written, CR
- If account opened in your name, accruing interest, EB
- If contract in writing promising future payment, neither.
Retirement Savings
[edit]Constructive receipt doctrine overridden in the case of 401(k)s/defined benefit plans
ERISA - Ensure safety of investment (funding requirements), impose vesting requirements
IRAs - (§408) Deductable and grows tax free. When value is realized, taxed as income.
- Maximum deductable amount contributed is $4000/yr (or $8000 for married couples).
- After 50 yrs,
- Only permissible for lower tax bracket individuals
- IRA AGI w/o plan < $156,000
- IRA AGI w/ plan < $83,000 Married or $52,000 Single
ROTH IRA - Non-deductable, but grows tax free and is not taxed as income when realized
- 5-year minimum, money may be taken out tax free later for certain expenditures (home-purchase, college, et al.)
- §72(t) 10% penalty & exceptions
- ROTH IRA < $156,000 Married or $99,000 Single
The value of deducting today is equal to not paying taxes on that income
Roth IRA uses after tax dollars allowing you to shelter more.
Formulae
[edit]Calculating Gross Income
[edit]Gross Receipts (GR); Cost of Goods Sold (CG) GI = GR – CG
Tax on Tax
[edit]A offers B payment of $100K + income tax liability for all payments made by A to B. What will A pay B?
A offers B the sum of $X + $Y, such that given $X, $Y equals all income taxes due from payments by A to B (leaving B with $X wholly intact after taxes). Given $X, what is $X + $Y?
[ $X / (1 - TR )] = $X + $Y
[$100K / (1 - 0.35)] = $153,846
Annuities
[edit]- §§61(a)(9), 72
- To determine amount of annuity payment that is excluded from gross income multiply payment by exclusion ratio
- Exclusion ratio = (investment in the contract / total expected return under the contract) - § 72
- ratio = % of each payment that is income
- ratio undertaxes interest in early years and overtaxes in later years so net saving (defer taxation)
- if live less than expected life, can take loss at death
- if live longer than expected life, entire amount subject to income tax
- alternatives (not adopted)
- investment-first – treat initial payments as return to capital until basis recovered
- income-first – treat initial payments as income and later as return
- Amounts w/drawn prior to annuitization are usually income
- favorable strategy b/c money you put in now accumulates tax free by insurance company; in savings account pay tax every year
- Exclusion ratio = (investment in the contract / total expected return under the contract) - § 72
Like-kind exchange formula
[edit]- §1031 - Like-kind exchange refers to transfers of like-property
Like-property refers to character of property not quality (City land traded for farm land are like-kind)
Post-Exchange Basis (PoXB) = Pre-Exchange Basis (PrXB) + Gain Recognized (GR) Boot Basis (BB) = Fair Market Value (FMV)
Boot: other shit tossed in to deal to balance out (whether cash, goods, or other property)
Numbers | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xfarm Basis | 110K | 130K | 50K | 80K | 50K | ||||
YFarm FMV | 100K | 100K | 100K | 60K | 60K | ||||
Boot | Cash 15K | Cash 15K | Cash -10K | ||||||
Tractor 8K | Tractor 8K | ||||||||
Amt Real | 123K | 123K | 60K | 60K | |||||
Basis | 110K | 130K | 80K | 50K | |||||
Real Gain/Loss | 13K | -7K | -20K | 10K |
- Basis Y
Orig Basis = 110
Gain Rec = 13
Total Basis alloc = 123
Cash + Tractor = 23
Basis in Y = 100
Gain if Y for (100) =
Gain prev rec =
Sum should be gain real =
Installment Payments formula
[edit]§453 - Pro rata recognition (installment method)
Sale Price = $8000
Basis = $1000
Gross Profit (Gain) = $7000
Inclusion ratio: 7000 / 8000 = 87.5%
Pay taxes on 87.5% of installment payments received each year.
Income should be recog from any year where you have that proportion where the gross profit