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Showing posts with label earned. Show all posts
Showing posts with label earned. Show all posts

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Dude, Free Dragon! and the Earned Income Tax Credit



I am looking at a report from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) dated March 31, 2014 and carrying the non-hummable title of

The Internal Revenue Service Fiscal Year 2013 Improper Payment Reporting Continues to Not Comply With the Improper Payments Elimination and Recovery Act.”

We have reviewed a number of previous TIGTA’a publications, and this one concerns the earned income credit. The initial idea behind it was laudable enough: it was intended to provide a floor to the most economically disadvantaged, while simultaneously diluting the disincentive as someone weaned off welfare and went back into the workforce.

Sounds good, right?

There is a card game called Magic: The Gathering. I have a number of friends who play, and one in particular who is a Tournament judge. Think of Dungeons and Dragons, translate it into a card game and you have Magic: The Gathering. The reason I bring it up is that there is a Magic card that allows one to put a dragon onto the board at no cost to the player. Dragons are as formidable as you would expect, so this is not insignificant in game context. The friends refer to it colloquially as “Dude, free dragon”!


The earned credit is the tax Code version of “Dude, free dragon”!

This credit was virtually built to be abused, and abused it has always been and will always be. One cannot turn down free dragons.

What does it take to power the earned income tax credit? It takes two things: earned income and a dependent child.

·        Earned income means that you have paid social security or self-employment tax on it. Workers compensation or unemployment, for example, will not power the EITC as one does not pay social security on either.
·       The other thing you need is a kid. Two is better than one. Three is better than two. Four is no better than three, so there is a limit to this escalation.

NOTE: There is a very limited credit for someone with little income and no children, but we will set that category aside for this discussion.

You need to have a job. Makes sense, if you remember what I said earlier about removing disincentives to return to work. A W-2 job is the easiest to understand.

Self-employment income will also do it. I suspect that any tax practitioner who has been around the block a few times has had or heard of an EITC client reporting self-employment income, likely with few if any expenses. The taxpayer is incentivized to lowball his/her expenses, as the credit can outstrip any additional taxes due from overstating his/her actual income. Alternatively, one might simply “make up” income, just to power the EITC.

You also need a kid. This is where it gets problematic, especially nowadays.  It can take the discipline of a sociologist to follow the convoluted trail of who-did-what-and-then-moved-in-with…. The bottom line is that a kid is the key to this ride. Having a kid, especially a kid you can “lend” out, becomes a commodity, and, like any commodity, the kid has value.

Where does a tax pro see this? Easy. How about two unmarried people who have a child together. One brings a child from a prior marriage. The facts make more sense if they maintain two households, but they wouldn’t be the first to live together and have two EITCs sent to the same address.

OBSERVATION: I am giving the IRS this one for free: check for two EITCs sent to the same address. You are welcome.

So you come to see me. You tell me that you are taking care of your on-and-off-girlfriend’s second daughter, because her mother is irresponsible and you have taken a liking to the girl. You are thinking of adopting, immediately after that around-the-world flight on a paraglider you are planning.  Coincidentally the kid also gives you an earned income tax credit. How am I to know whether this is really taking place, whether that the child is living with you and not with her mother, yada yada yada?

I will tell you what the IRS has said I am to do. Then I will tell you what I actually do.

The IRS keeps expanding what a tax preparer is to do when faced with an earned income tax credit.  Let’s go back to the Improper Payments Information Act that TIGTA referenced. This law goes back to 2002. TIGTA goes on to explain:

… the IRS’s estimates of Fiscal Year 2012 improper EITC payments were understated. They were based on an assumption that a provision in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 … that increased the EITC for certain taxpayers would expire at the end of 2010. However, the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization and Job Creation Act of 2010 extended the provision through 2012.”

Did you get that? The IRS did not update its 2012 estimates for a law passed in 2010. Amazing. Let a tax CPA do that and he/she will soon have no clients.

Let’s continue:

It was later extended through December 2017 by the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012.”

There is my second freebie to the IRS.

The EITC remains the only revenue program fund to be considered at high risk for improper payments.”

How much money are we talking about?

The IRS estimates that 22% to 26% of EITC payments were issued improperly in Fiscal Year 2013. The dollar value … was estimated to be between $13.3 billion and $15.6 billion.”

This is real money, even by Washington standards. So what was the IRS plan to deal with this?

The IRS announced a plan in January 2010 to register, license and create enforcement tools that would impact the paid preparer community more broadly.

Paid preparers assisted in the preparation of approximately 66 percent of all EITC claims paid in Tax Year 2008.”

Let me see if I get this right:

·       The IRS has a “Dude, free dragon” tax credit
·       People abuse “Dude, free dragon”
·       A normal person can hardly prepare his/her own taxes anymore, so he/she uses a preparer, therefore
·       Abuse of the EITC is the preparer’s fault

Right….

Let’s continue.

However, in January 18, 2013, a Federal Court enjoined the IRS from enforcing the regulatory requirements for registered tax return preparers.”

We discussed this in an earlier blog. The IRS was arguing that they could regulate preparers because of a Treasury decision having to do with government payment for horses after the civil war. The Federal Court said no; the IRS did not have legal authority and could not arrogate such authority to itself.

NOTE: Seems quaint reasoning, especially after six years of the current Administration, doesn’t it?

The IRS is miffed, sticks out its lip and pouts:

The Court ruling materially affects the basis on which the IRS planned to establish a baseline for meaningful reduction targets as previously indicated.”

So IRS Commissioner Koskinen is placing blame on the tax preparer community. If only the IRS could regulate preparers!

There is some truth to this. There are many grades of preparers. There are the classically-trained, such as tax attorneys and tax CPAs. There are also Enrolled Agents (EAs), many of which are quite good. Then we drop to people who have taken an H&R Block course. Then you have those that never even took the course. It is that last category or two that the IRS wants to reach, but they have been stymied.

In the meanwhile, you come into my office with an EITC. What does the IRS expect me to do?

Remember that the key is the kid. The IRS wants me to:

·       Review school records
·       Review health care records
·       Review child care provider records
·       Review social services records

And so on. If I don’t do this, I have to indicate to the IRS that I did not do so. On a form included with your tax return. The IRS reserves the right to later come to my office and review my files.

As much as I appreciate the opportunity to soothe my inner social worker, it seems a lot to ask for the few hundred dollars I may charge for that tax return.

So what do I do?

Easy. I do not accept a client with an EITC. Furthermore, I would also consider releasing an existing client who slips into the EITC, unless I know them well and have very strong confidence in their tax numbers. I have to, as the risk to me from that tax return is disproportionate.

I cannot afford to play “Dude, free dragon”!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Changes In Ohio Taxes Beginning In 2013



Ohio Governor John Kasich on June 30, 2013 signed Ohio House Bill 59, which made significant changes to Ohio taxes.  

Individual Income Tax Decrease
 Individual income tax rates will be cut 10% over three years.
The $20 personal exemption credit will be available only to taxpayers with Ohio taxable income under $30,000.
Sales Tax Increase
Effective September 1, 2013 Ohio’s sales and use tax rate will increase to 5.75% (from 5.5%)
Minimum Commercial Activities Tax (CAT) Increase
The Commercial Activity Tax (CAT) was previously $150 on the first $1 million in annual gross receipts, regardless of total annual gross receipts. The CAT tax on the first $1 million will now vary depending on the taxpayer’s total annual gross receipts. The new minimums are as follows:
  • $1 million or less in annual gross receipts – $150
  • From  $1 million to $2 million in annual gross receipts – $800
  • From $2 million to $4 million in annual gross receipts – $2,100
  • More than $4 million in annual gross receipts – $2,600
Please note that the above apply only to first $1 million in annual gross receipts. Receipts over $1 million will continue to be taxed at a 0.26 percent rate.
 Small Business Income Deduction
There is a new tax deduction for small business income starting in 2013. The deduction will be the lesser of $125,000 ($62,500 per spouse if filing separately) or 50% of the small business income includable in federal adjusted gross income.
 The deduction will apply to sole proprietors as well as to investors in passthrough entities.

The deduction will not be available to trusts and restates.
 New Ohio Earned Income Tax Credit
New for 2013, the new credit will be equal to 5% of the federal tax credit.
New Sales Tax on Downloads
Beginning in 2014, sales tax will apply on downloads of music, books and videos.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Reviewing Two ObamaCare Taxes Springing Up in 2013

We are beginning over here to re-review the tax aspects of ObamaCare after the Supreme Court’s decision last week. There are several tax changes, but today we will revisit the new investment income tax and the new earned income tax. These will happen in 2013, so let’s go over them.
Investment Income
If you are single, you will owe a new investment tax if your adjusted gross income (AGI) is over $200,000. If you are married, you will owe the new tax if your AGI is over $250,000. (I know, twice $200,000 is considerably more than $250,000. I did not write the law). If this is you, will owe a brand-new 3.8% tax on your investment income.
Let’s be clear: it is not necessarily ALL your investment income. Rather it will be on investment income over $200,000 or $250,000, as the case may be. If you are married and retired and your entire adjusted gross income of $250,000 is interest and dividends, you will owe no NEW tax. You will owe plenty of OLD tax, though.
What is investment income? Let’s go with the easy examples: dividends, interest, capital gains (short-term and long-term), royalties and annuities outside retirement plans
NOTE:  Net investment income is also defined to include income from a passive activity. This concerns me, as the rental of a duplex is a passive activity, as is passthrough income to a “passive” member in an LLC. Under Section 469, these activities were considered “trades or businesses,” although the activity could be further tagged as “passive” or “nonpassive.” They were not however tagged as “investment.” This new tax appears to use the language differently from Section 469 and equates “passive” with “investment.” The IRS unfortunately has yet to issue formal guidance in this area.
How can this tax surprise you? Here are a few ways:
(1)   You sell your business.
(2)   You get married.
(3)   You sell your principal residence, and the gain exceeds the $250,000/$500,000 exclusion.
(4)   You inherit and sell stock from a parent’s estate.
Earned Income
If you are single, you will pay an extra 0.9% Medicare tax on your earned income over $200,000. If married, that threshold changes to $250,000.
What is earned income? The easiest way is to ask whether you paid or will pay social security or self-employment tax on the income. If the answer is “yes”, you have earned income. Note that this definition excludes your pension, 401(k) and IRA distributions.
Let’s go over a few examples.
EXAMPLE 1: A married couple filing jointly has $360,000 of adjusted gross income—$240,000 of wages plus $120,000 of interest, dividends and capital gains. They have $110,000 of investment income` over the $250,000 threshold. They will owe an extra 3.8% of that $110,000, or $4,180, in tax.
EXAMPLE 2: In the following year, the same couple has $400,000 of income, the difference being a $40,000 bonus. All their investment income is now above the threshold amount. Their new investment income tax will be $4,560. In addition, since their earned income is now above $250,000 they will owe the new earned income tax of $270 ((280,000- 250,000) times 0.9%).
EXAMPLE 3:  After many years, you move from Purchase, New York. You sell your house for $920,000 and are single.  Your exclusion amount on the sale is $250,000 so the taxable gain is 670,000. Assuming that you earned income is over $200,000, the new investment income tax will be $25,460 ((920,000 – 250,000) times 3.8%).
We will discuss other tax changes in a future blog. Some are delayed (such as the employer penalty) and others are already in place but are somewhat esoteric (the prescription drug fee).