chapter 1 federal income taxation - an overview federal income taxation - an overview ©2008...

35
Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Mark Higgins

Upload: winfred-eaton

Post on 26-Dec-2015

226 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Chapter 1Chapter 1

Federal Income Taxation -An Overview

Federal Income Taxation -An Overview

©2008 South-Western©2008 South-Western©2008 South-Western©2008 South-Western

Kevin MurphyKevin MurphyMark HigginsMark Higgins

Kevin MurphyKevin MurphyMark HigginsMark Higgins

Page 2: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-2Transparency 1-2© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

What is the Definition of a Tax?

What is the Definition of a Tax?

An enforced, involuntary contribution

Required and determined by law

Providing revenue for public and

governmental purposes

For which no specific benefits or

services are received

Page 3: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-3Transparency 1-3© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

Equality Tax should be based on the taxpayer’s

ability to pay

Horizontal Equity: Two similarly situated

taxpayers are taxed the same

Vertical Equity: Differently situated taxpayers

are taxed differently but fairly

Page 4: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-4Transparency 1-4© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

EqualityCertainty

When and how a tax is to be paid should be known to the taxpayer

The taxpayer should be able to determine the amount of the tax

Page 5: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-5Transparency 1-5© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Filing RequirementsFiling Requirements

Return must be filed annually Calendar-year individuals file and pay

on or before the 15th day of AprilMay receive an extension of time to file but

not time to pay

Page 6: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-6Transparency 1-6© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

EqualityCertaintyConvenience

Tax should be levied when the taxpayer has funds available to pay

Page 7: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-7Transparency 1-7© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

Standards of a Good Tax System

Adam Smith’s Four Criteria

EqualityCertaintyConvenienceEconomy

The costs of complying with the tax system should be minimal

Page 8: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-8Transparency 1-8© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax ComputationTax Computation

Tax = Tax Base X Tax Rate

Page 9: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-9Transparency 1-9© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax ComputationTax Computation

Tax = Tax Base X Tax Rate

the value subject to taxation

Page 10: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-10Transparency 1-10© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax Rates for Income TaxTax Rates for Income Tax

• Marginal Tax Rate is the rate of tax on the next dollar of taxable income

• Average Tax Rate is the rate equal to the total tax divided by the tax base

• Effective Tax Rate is the rate equal to the total tax divided by economic income

Page 11: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-11Transparency 1-11© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax StructuresTax Structures

Proportional

average tax rate remains the sameas tax base increases

average rate

tax base

tax

rate

Page 12: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-12Transparency 1-12© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax StructuresTax Structures

Regressive

average tax rate decreases astax base increases

average rate

tax base

tax

rate

Page 13: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-13Transparency 1-13© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax StructuresTax Structures

Progressive

average tax rate increases astax base increases average rate

tax base

tax

rate

Page 14: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-14Transparency 1-14© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Major Types of U.S. TaxesMajor Types of U.S. Taxes

Individual Income

Sales

Total Taxes

Property

Employment

All Others

Corporate Income

Page 15: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-15Transparency 1-15© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Income TaxTaxes are paid by individuals,

corporations, estates, and trustsTax base is total income less allowed

reductions

Page 16: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-16Transparency 1-16© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Employment TaxTaxes are paid by employees, employers,

and self-employed taxpayerTax base is wages and salaries earnedTwo major types

Social Security Unemployment

Page 17: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-17Transparency 1-17© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Sales TaxTaxes are paid by purchasers of goods

and servicesTax base is the selling price of a product or

a service

Page 18: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-18Transparency 1-18© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Property TaxTaxes are paid by owners of propertyTax base is the assessed value of real or

personal property (ad valorem)

Page 19: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-19Transparency 1-19© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Excise TaxTaxes are paid by purchasersTax base is the quantity purchased and not

the value of the purchase

Page 20: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-20Transparency 1-20© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Types of U.S. TaxesTypes of U.S. Taxes

Wealth Transfer Tax Taxes are paid by entity transferring

propertyTax base is the value of the property

transferred Transfers to spouses and charities are

excluded Lifetime Unified Credit excludes up to $2M in

2007 Donors may exclude annual gifts of $12,000

per donee

Page 21: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-21Transparency 1-21© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaTax Formula

Broadly defined income

Includes all forms ofincome(Chapter 3)

Page 22: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-22Transparency 1-22© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaTax Formula

Broadly defined income

minus: Exclusions Income specificallyexcluded from income by legislative grace(Chapter 4)

Page 23: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-23Transparency 1-23© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaTax Formula

Broadly defined incomeminus: Exclusions

Income to beReported

equals: Gross Income

Page 24: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-24Transparency 1-24© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaTax Formula

Broadly defined incomeminus: Exclusionsequals: Gross Income

Amountsspecificallyallowed as subtractions (Chapters 5 - 7)

minus: Deductions

Page 25: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-25Transparency 1-25© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Some Deduction ExamplesSome Deduction Examples

Expenses (Chapters 5 & 6) Current period expenditures incurred in order to earn income

Losses (Chapter 7) Transaction losses result when an asset is disposed of at a

price less than its tax cost Annual losses result when allowed deductions exceed

income

Exemptions (Chapter 8) A minimum amount of income needed for basic living Personal and dependency ($3,400 each)

Page 26: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-26Transparency 1-26© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Deduction TypesDeduction Types

Gross Income

minus: For Deductions not restricted based on taxpayer’s income generally trade, business, rent or royalty expenses

minus: From Deductionsrestricted based on Adjusted Gross Incomegenerally personal expenses

–Itemized, or–standard amount (changes with filing status)

Page 27: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-27Transparency 1-27© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaAdjusted Gross Income

Tax FormulaAdjusted Gross Income

Gross Income

minus: For Deductions

equals: Adjusted Gross Income [AGI]

Page 28: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-28Transparency 1-28© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaTaxable Income

Tax FormulaTaxable Income

Gross Income

minus: For Deductions

equals: Adjusted Gross Income [AGI]

minus: From Deductions and Exemptions

Taxable Income

Page 29: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-29Transparency 1-29© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax FormulaThe Tax

Tax FormulaThe Tax

Taxable Incometimes: Tax Rateequals: Income Tax Liabilityminus: Prepayments & Creditsequals: Tax or (Refund) due

Page 30: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-30Transparency 1-30© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Audit and Appeals ProcessStatute of Limitations

Audit and Appeals ProcessStatute of Limitations

Three years from filing date Extends to six years if income is under-

reported by 25% of gross income No limitation for fraud or if no return is

filed

Page 31: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-31Transparency 1-31© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Audit and Appeals ProcessSelection for Audit

Audit and Appeals ProcessSelection for Audit

Only about 2% of returns are audited

Procedures usedDiscriminant Function SystemTaxpayer Compliance Measurement

Program Document perfection & Information

matching

Page 32: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-32Transparency 1-32© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax PlanningTax Planning

Goal is to maximize after-tax wealth

Page 33: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-33Transparency 1-33© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax PlanningTiming

Tax PlanningTiming

Time Value of moneyDefer incomeAccelerate deductions

Marginal tax rateRecognize income in year of lower marginal rateRecognize deductions in year of higher marginal

rateShift income to taxpayer with lower marginal rate

Page 34: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-34Transparency 1-34© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Tax PlanningTax Avoidance Vs. Tax

Evasion

Tax PlanningTax Avoidance Vs. Tax

Evasion Tax Avoidance - Taxpayers have no

obligation to pay more tax than the law requires

Tax Evasion - Taxpayers may not use fraudulent or deceptive behavior to hide tax liability

Page 35: Chapter 1 Federal Income Taxation - An Overview Federal Income Taxation - An Overview ©2008 South-Western Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins Kevin Murphy Mark Higgins

Transparency 1-35Transparency 1-35© 2008 South-Western© 2008 South-Western

Ethics Ethics

Preparers are subject to penalties for negligence and fraud

Ethical StandardsIRS Circular 230AICPA’s Code of Professional ConductAICPA’s Statements on Standards for Tax

Services