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Showing posts with label full. Show all posts
Showing posts with label full. Show all posts

Friday, October 19, 2012

Talking About 2014 ObamaCare Employer Taxes

I have been reviewing two ObamaCare employer taxes that are scheduled to kick-in in 2014. It’s more than a year away, but let’s say you call me and we meet for coffee. It’s a business meeting. With cheesecake.
I’ll start the conversation off:
Me:                  If an employer has enough employees, then the employer is expected to provide health benefits.
You:                 What constitutes “enough employees?”
Me:                  More than 50 full-time employees. Full-time is defined as 30 hours per week, by the way.
You:                 So if I have less than 51 full-time employees, I escape the tax?
Me:                  Yes.

You:                 What if I have more than 50?
Me:                  Depends.
You:                 On what?
Me:                  On whether any employee receives a government subsidy.
You:                 And I am supposed to know this how?
Me:                  Trust me, you’ll find out.


You:                 What if I have more than 50 employees but no one gets a subsidy?
Me:                  How did you accomplish that, Houdini?
You:                 All my employees have their insurance covered by their spouse.
Me:                  Congratulations, Harry.

You:                 What if one divorces and gets a subsidy?
Me:                  You have a problem.
You:                 What problem?
Me:                  Your penalty will be either $2,000 or $3,000, depending.
You:                 Depending on what?
Me:                  Depending on whether you offer no insurance or offer unaffordable insurance.
You:                 So if I offer no insurance it will cost me $3,000 multiplied by some number?
Me:                  No.
You:                 You are getting on my nerves.
Me:                  The penalty for not offering health insurance is $2,000.
You:                 Per employee?
Me:                  No. You get to exclude the first 30 employees.
You:                 Huh?
Me:                  I didn’t write this stuff.
You:                 Say I have 55 full-time employees. What is it going to cost me?
Me:                  (55 minus 30) times $2,000 = $50,000.    
You:                 What if I fire 5 employees?
Me:                  Then you meet the 50-employee limit and have no tax.
You:                 Seriously?
Me:                  Yep.
You:                 Even if an employee gets government subsidy?
Me:                  Did you ever work at Bain Capital?

You:                 What is this “unaffordable” insurance thing?
Me:                  If the insurance exceeds a certain percentage of the employee’s family income, then the insurance is deemed “unaffordable.”
You:                 What is that percentage, oh beacon of despair?
Me:                  9.5% of household income.
You:                 Household income, what is that?
Me:                  An easy answer would be to add the husband and wife’s income.
You:                 How am I to know the spouse’s income?
Me:                  Trust me, you’ll find out.
You:                 How?
Me:                  When the government notifies you about the subsidy.
You:                 I am really starting to dislike you.
Me:                  Hey, I’ve got feelings here.
You:                 So if I see to it that all my employee’s spouses are doctors and engineers, then I can avoid the penalty?
Me:                  You have escaped yet again, Harry.

You:                 Say that I don’t escape. What is my tax?
Me:                  Well, you get to do two calculations. You pay the lower number.
You:                 Are you charging me for this aggravation?
Me:                  Yes.
Me:                  The first calculation is to multiply every employee receiving a subsidy for your unaffordable insurance by $3,000.
You:                 Then what?
Me:                  You do the same calculation as if you offered no insurance at all.  You know, the $2,000 calculation.
You:                 Huh, what’s the difference?
Me:                  The $2,000 calculation excludes the first 30 employees. Then it is just multiplication.
Me (cont’d):    The $3,000 calculation counts only those employees receiving a subsidy.
You:                 So if I offer unaffordable insurance, but no one gets the subsidy, my tax is zero?
Me:                  I am in awe, Harry.

You:                 What if I set up two companies, with neither having more than 50 employees?
Me:                  They already thought of that angle. No go if the companies are related. You owning both makes them related.
You:                 What if I increase my portion of the insurance to, you know, keep it “affordable?”
Me:                  That would work.
You:                 I would have to reduce the actual salaries or eliminate bonuses and raises to make the numbers work.
Me:                  Were you grades too high for community organizing?
You:                 What are other companies doing?
Me:                  Depends on the company. Some companies are too large for the 50 employees to mean anything. Still… Did you hear about Darden Restaurants?
You:                 Darden is who?
Me:                  Think Red Lobster and Olive Garden.
You:                 Are you charging me by the word?
Me:                  I’ll ignore that. Anyway, according to the Orlando Sentinel the company intends to reduce its maximum schedule to 28 hours per week per employee in “selected” restaurants. They told the newspaper that this is "just one of the many things we are evaluating to help us address the cost implications healthcare reform will have on our business."
You:                 Wow, that seems harsh.
Me:                  Where do you have that money tree planted, exactly?

You:                 How does an employee get a subsidy, exactly? Is that what sets this whole thing off?
Me:                  By “whole thing” you mean “unaffordable?”                      
You:                 I am going to hit you.
Me:                  There are two conditions. We already talked about the first one: the 9.5% of household income.
You:                 You mean 9.5% of a number that I have no hope of knowing or finding out?
Me:                  Yep, that one.
You:                 Do I want to know the second one?
Me:                  If you want your head to blow off.
You:                 What…? You have to tell me now.
Me:                  The second condition is that your employee’s household income ….
You:                 Which I do not know, right?
Me:                  Right. Now continuing where I was …. Your employee’s household income must be less than 400% of the federal poverty level.
You:                 You said 400%. I thought accountants were supposed to be good with numbers.
Me:                  I am. And it’s 400%.
You:                 Seriously?
Me:                  You are way too sharp to ever be hired by CNN.
You:                 So… what is 400% for a husband and wife?
Me:                  Close to $90 grand.
You:                 $90 grand! I didn’t make that last year! Or the year before!
Me:                  Maybe you can qualify for the subsidy.
You:                 I think I am going to fire you as my CPA.


Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Small Business Health Care Tax Credit Redux

We’ve been looking again at the small business health care tax credit. Truthfully, I have been less than impressed with this credit, at least for our clients. It seems quite heavily engineered to accomplish so little.
There are three key steps to this credit:
(1)    How many employees do you have?
(2)    How much do you pay them?
(3)    Do you have a “qualifying” insurance arrangement?
Let’s go through them.
HOW MANY EMPLOYEES DO YOU HAVE?
To be fair, the credit does not address the number of employees. It instead addresses “full time equivalents.” This makes sense, as it may require two (or three) part-time employees to have one “full-time equivalent” employee.
The first thing to do is count the number of employees. This requires a definition of “employee” (remember, this is the tax code). The term “employee” does NOT include the following:
·         a sole proprietor
·         a partner in a partnership
·         a more-than-2% shareholder in an S corporation
·         a more-than-5% owner in any other business

Wait, there is more:
·         a family member of the above, including spouses, lineal family (ancestor/descendent) and in-laws.

So, you start with your year-end payroll summary. You eliminate the owners and their family. That leaves you with “employees’ for purposes of this credit.

Next you add-up the hours worked for those who remain. You stop counting at 2,080 hours per employee. After you adding-up all the hours, you divide by 2,080 to arrive at the number of FTEs. If this number is less than 25, you are still in the hunt.

The magic number is 10 or less FTEs. Above that number you will start to phase-out. By 25 you have phased-out completely.

HOW MUCH DO YOU PAY THEM?

We are talking Medicare wages, not income-taxable wages. The key difference will be contributions to 401(k)s, as those are Medicare-taxable but not income-taxable.

Fortunately you get to exclude the wages for the people left out above: the owners, their spouses and other family.

This can get you into an odd factual situation. You can have a workforce over 25 people – all full-time – and still qualify for this credit. The reason is that you have to eliminate the owners, their spouses and family. For some of our clients, that eliminates a sizeable part, if not the majority, of the workforce.

The key number here is $25,000 per FTE.  Above that amount you will start to phase-out.  By $50,000 you have completely phased-out. 

DO YOU HAVE A “QUALIFYING”INSURANCE ARRANGEMENT?

The insurance we are discussing is what you would anticipate: traditional insurance, HMO, PPO and hospital indemnity. It also includes specified illness (think cancer insurance) as well as some dental and vision insurance.

What it doesn’t include is an HSA.

The key requirement is that you – the employer - have to pay at least 50% of the cost of the insurance. There are some tweaks around the edges (such as if the insurance company does not charge the same premium for all employees in single coverage).

If you do not pay at least 50% of the health insurance, there is no point in even starting the calculation.

There is also a “ceiling” test: your insurance can only be so expensive for purposes of this calculation. The government will publish state-specific amounts for “small group market average premiums.” Your insurance cannot exceed that amount for your state.

AN INTERIM STEP

Add-up your cost of premiums for “qualifying” insurance for your “FTEs.”

WHAT IS THE AMOUNT OF THE CREDIT

If you are for-profit, the credit is 35% of the interim step.

ARE WE DONE?

Of course not. If you have too many employees – or the right number of employees but pay them too much – your credit gets phased-out, eventually to zero. No credit for you.

There are two phase-outs, which means that you cannot do this in your head.

(1)    If you have more than 10 FTE’s you start to phase-out. The phase-out is

(FTE – 10)
15

                                So, at 25 FTE’s you are completely phased-out.

(2)    If your average wage is more than $25,000, you start to phase-out.

(average annual wage - 25,000)
25,000

                                So, at $50,000 you are completely phased-out.

HOW ABOUT AN EXAMPLE?

Let’s say that you have 9 FTEs with an average wage of $23,000.

4 are single coverage and 5 are family coverage. You pay 50% of the single rate.

The premiums are $4,000 for singles and $10,000 for family. The state limits are $5,000 for singles and $12,000 for family.
Here is the calculation.

                                $2,000 times 9 equals                     18,000

The credit is 35% times 18,000 or $6,300.                      

LET’S CHANGE AN ASSUMPTION

What if the employer pays 50% whether of single or family coverage?

Here is the calculation:

                                $2,000 times 4 equals                     8,000
                                $5,000 times 5 equals                   25,000
                                                                                           33,000

The credit is 35% times 33,000 or $11,550.                    

HOW ABOUT ANOTHER EXAMPLE?

Let’s say you have 40 part-time employees. They total 20 FTEs. The average wage is $25,000. To keep this easy, let’s say that your cost of the health insurance is $240,000

(1)    First phase-out
20 FTE - 10                           equals 66.6% phase-out
15

(2)    Second phase-out

$25,000 - $25,000              equals 0% phase-out (that’s good!)
$25,000

The credit is (35% times $240,000) times (100% minus 66.6%) times (100% minus 0%) - or $28,000.

MISCELLANEOUS

The credit is part of the general business credit, which means that you get to carry it over if you cannot use it in a given tax year. In addition, the credit is allowed for AMT, which is good. You do have to reduce your deductible insurance by the amount of the credit.

As I said, we have been less than impressed. It is, however, a great way for Congress to increase someone’s tax preparation fees.