Title: Tax Shelter
1Tax Shelter
- Presented by
- Alice Kasubutare
- Boon Ong
2Agenda
- Introduction
- Tax Shelter
- Abusive tax shelter
- Tax shelter penalties
- Tax shelter FAQs
- Additional readings
- References
- Appendix IRC Code
3Introduction
- A tax shelter is a type of investment that allows
someone to reduce their tax liability. Examples
include investments in pension plans and real
estate. You can also reduce your taxable income
if you have losses on investments. - But when shelters are designed solely for the
purpose of avoiding taxes, they become abusive
Tax shelters. - The vast majority of tax shelters are in full
compliance with the tax laws, but an increasing
number of them have crossed the bounds into being
"abusive tax shelters". These are cases where the
revenue loss to the government produces little or
no tax benefit to society.
4Definition of a Tax Shelter
- is any investment strategy that enables you to
legally decrease or avoid taxation - is an investment with tax deductions and tax
benefits of greater value than the investment
itself - A device used by a taxpayer to reduce or defer
payment of taxes - Transactions promoted for the promise of tax
benefits with no meaningful change in the
taxpayer's control over, or benefit from the
taxpayer's income or assets. These are
transactions that typically have no economic
purpose other than reducing taxes
5Characteristics of a Tax Shelter
- There are many methods by which taxpayers shelter
their losses, but these three characteristics are
usually found in tax shelters, either separately
or in combination - Taxes are deferred to later years.
- Ordinary gains (100 percent taxable) are
converted to capital gains (only 40 percent
taxable), or capital losses (only 50 percent
deductible), are converted to ordinary losses
(100 percent deductible) in both cases producing
a lower tax liability (valid until 1987). - Leverage is obtained through various financing
arrangements
6Common Tax Shelter Strategies
- Lower your current taxable income Placing your
money in certain investments is one way to lower
your taxable income. - Lower the tax rate of certain income For
example, hold onto an investment long enough to
be taxed at long-term rather than short-term
capital gains rates. - Increase your itemized deductions Sometimes,
you can combine deductions in one year to gain a
higher benefit. - Defer income to years when you expect to be in a
lower tax bracket
7Existing tax shelters
- Tax Deferred Programs-allows you to select an
amount by which the gross salary can be reduced
and tax-sheltered. The tax deferred portion of
the gross income is not included as part of your
gross earnings for State and Federal tax
purposes. Thus, the employee receives a current
tax advantage (401k or IRA plans) - 401K Plans- Each participating employee decides
the amount to be withheld as a 401k contribution
each month from his or her pay. - -- The employer withholds these amounts BEFORE
calculating income taxes on the employee's pay. - -- The employer forwards the money to a third
party administrator, who invests the employees'
contributions per specific instructions provided
by the employees.
8Existing tax shelters (cont.)
- Traditional IRA -designed as a tax shelter to
hold money contributed by individuals for their
retirement. Because most funds in these accounts
were deposited on a pre-tax basis, when you
retire and begin withdrawing the funds, you will
pay income taxes on the withdrawals at your
then-current tax rate - Roth IRA -contributions for this type of IRA
typically come directly from your wallet or bank
account and NOT as deductions from your income
via work. The main advantage of a Roth IRA is
that when you retire and begin withdrawing the
money you pay NO TAXES on the withdrawals
9Existing Tax shelters (cont.)
- Deductions for Owning Your Home
- 1. Mortgage Interest
- Joint tax filers can deduct all the
interest on a maximum of 1 million in mortgage
debt secured by a first and second home. - 2. Equity Loan Interest
- deduct some of the interest you pay on a
home equity loan or line of credit. - 3. Property Taxes
- property taxes are fully deductible from your
income. - 4. Capital Gains Exclusion
- Married taxpayers who file jointly now get
to keep, tax free, up to 500,000 in profit on
the sale of a home used as a principal residence
for two of the prior five years. Single folks and
married taxpayers who file separately get to keep
up to 250,000 apiece tax free (Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997 )
10Existing tax shelters (cont.)
- Deductions For Legitimate Business Activity
- Business must have a profit motive
- To qualify as business deductions, expenses must
be - Ordinary and necessary, This is defined as any
activity that is associated with that business - Paid or incurred during the taxable year, and
connected with the conduct of a trade or business
. - Gifting
- you can give up to the annual exclusion
amount (11,000 in 2004) to a person, every year,
without facing any gift taxes, and without the
recipient owing an income tax on the gifts. And
you can give up to 1,000,000 in gifts total, in
your lifetime
11Whats an Abusive tax Shelter?
- Definition a transaction, or series of
transactions, created for the sole purpose of
avoiding taxes. Unlike legal tax planning
techniques, abusive tax schemes often use
"multi-layer transactions for the purpose of
concealing the true nature and ownership of the
taxable income and/or assets," according to the
Internal revenue service.
12Whats an abusive tax shelter ? (cont.)
- An "abusive tax shelter" is a marketing scheme
that involves tax transactions with little or no
economic value. An abusive tax shelter offers you
inflated tax savings on your tax return based on
large tax write offs and tax credits. The tax
write offs and tax credits on your tax return are
often out of proportion to your investment. An
abusive tax shelter exists solely to reduce tax
on your tax return with no real economic benefit.
13Potential abuse indicators
- Tax examiners are taught to investigate the
following situations for possible abusive
financial maneuvers - Investments made late in the tax year indicate
there may be deductions for prepaid expenses that
are not allowable. - A very large portion of the investment made in
the first year indicates the transaction may have
been entered into for tax purposes rather than
economic motivation. - A loss exceeding a taxpayer's investment
indicates the possibility of a nonrecourse note.
14Potential abuse indicators (cont.)
- If the burdens and benefits of ownership have not
passed to the taxpayer, the parties have not
intended for ownership of the property to pass at
the time of the alleged sale. - A sales price that does not relate comparably to
the fair market value of the property indicates
the value of the property has been overstated. - If the estimated present value of all future
income does not compare favorably with the
present value of all the investment and
associated costs of the shelter the economic
reality of the investment may be questionable.
15Checklist for an abusive tax shelter
- The IRS has also issued the following as a
checklist for determining whether a particular
offering is an abusive tax shelter. These
questions will help to provide a clue as TO THE
abusive nature of the plan - Do the benefits far outweigh the economic
benefits? - Is this a transaction you would seriously
consider, apart from the tax benefits, if you
hoped to make a profit? - Do shelter assets really exist and, if so, are
they insured for less than their purchase price? - Is there a nontax justification for the way
profits and losses are allocated to partners?
16Checklist for an abusive tax shelter (cont.)
- Do the facts and supporting documents make
economic sense? In that connection, are there
sales and resales of the tax shelter property at
ever increasing prices? - Does the investment plan involve a gimmick,
device, or sham to hide the economic reality of
the transaction? - Does the promoter offer to backdate documents
after the close of the year and are you
instructed to backdate checks covering your
investment? - Is your debt a real debt or are you assured by
the promoter that you will never have to pay it? - Does the transaction involve laundering United
States-source income through foreign corporations
incorporated in a tax haven and owned by the
United States shareholders?
17Abusive Tax Shelters
- Offshore Transactions. Some people use offshore
transactions to avoid paying United States income
tax. Use of an offshore credit card, trust or
other arrangement to hide or underreport income
or to claim false deductions on a federal tax
return is illegal. - Phony Tax Payment Checks. In this scheme, con
artists sell fictitious financial instruments
that look like checks to pay a tax liability,
mortgage and other debts. The con artists may
also counsel their clients to use a phony check
to overpay their taxes so they can receive a
refund from the IRS for the overpayment. The
false checks, called sight drafts, are worthless
and have no financial value. It is illegal to use
these sight drafts to pay a tax liability or
other debts
18Abusive Tax Shelters
- No Taxes Withheld From Wages. Illegal schemes are
being promoted that instruct employers not to
withhold federal income tax or employment taxes
from wages paid to their employees. These schemes
are based on an incorrect interpretation of tax
law and have been refuted in court - Improper Home-Based Business. This scheme
purports to offer tax relief but in reality is
illegal tax avoidance. The promoters of this
scheme claim that individual taxpayers can deduct
most, or all, of their personal expenses as
business expenses by setting up a bogus
home-based business. But the tax code firmly
establishes that a clear business purpose and
profit motive must exist in order to generate and
claim allowable business expenses.
19Abusive Tax Shelters
- Share/Borrow EITC Dependents. Unscrupulous tax
preparers "share" one client's qualifying
children with another client in order to allow
both clients to claim the Earned Income Tax
Credit. For example, one client may have four
children but only needs to list two to get the
maximum EITC. The preparer will list two children
on the first clients return and the other two on
another clients tax return. The preparer and the
client "selling" the dependents split a fee.
20Tax shelter penalties
- Enhanced penalties
- Last year's big tax cut, the American Jobs
Creation Act of 2004 (2004 Jobs Act), boosted the
penalties for failing to disclosure abusive
transactions .The penalty for failing to disclose
a reportable transaction is 10,000 for
individuals and 50,000 for businesses and other
entities. The penalty for not disclosing a listed
transaction is higher 100,000 for individuals
and 200,000 for all other taxpayers. Taxpayers
also risk accuracy-related penalties.
21Tax shelter penalties
- The 2004 Jobs Act did not go far enough for some
in Congress. The Tax shelter and Tax Haven Reform
Act of 2005, which was recently introduced in the
Senate, would impose hefty fines on promoters,
either 150 percent of the promoter's gross income
from the transaction or the amount assessed
against the taxpayer, whichever is greater.
"Effective penalties should make sure that the
peddler of an abusive tax shelter is deprived of
every penny of profit earned from selling or
implementing the shelter and is fined on top of
that," Senator Carl Levin, D-Mich., one of the
bill's sponsors, said.
22Tax shelter penalties
- Types of penalties
- The following tax shelter penalties must be
disclosed to the SEC - The penalty imposed by Code Sec. 6707(a) in the
amount determined under Code Sec. 6707A(b)(2) for
failing to disclose a listed transaction - The accuracy-related penalty imposed by Code
Sec. 6662A(a) at the 30 percent rate determined
under Code Sec. 6662A(c) for a reportable
transaction understatement with respect to which
the relevant facts affecting the tax treatment of
the item were not adequately disclosed under Code
Sec. 6011 regs
23Tax Shelter penalties
- The accuracy-related penalty imposed by Code Sec.
6662(a) at the 40 percent rate determined under
Code Sec. 6662(h) for a gross valuation
misstatement if the person would, but for the
exclusionary rule of Code Sec. 6662A(e)(2(C)(ii),
have been subject to the accuracy-related penalty
under Code Sec. 6662A(a) at the 30 percent rate
determined under Code Sec. 6662A(c) and - The penalty imposed by Code Sec. 6707A(e) for
failing to disclose the above three penalties to
the SEC. - Caution. The IRS treats not disclosing any of
the first three penalties the same as failing to
disclose a listed transaction Consequently, the
taxpayer is liable for additional penalties.
24Tax Shelter FAQs
- If I want to withdraw my 401(k) from my old job,
what are the tax consequences? - If you are under 59 and 1/2, the entire amount
withdrawn will be taxable and is generally
subject to the 10 penalty on early distribution
unless you rollover the distribution to another
retirement plan or an IRA within 60 days of
receiving the distribution.
25Tax Shelter FAQs
- I had a 401(K) plan in my prior job. Can my
retirement money be transferred to my current
401(k) plan? - Yes. It's called a rollover from one qualified
plan to another qualified plan. The distribution
will not be taxable when the rollover is made
within 60 days. In order to avoid the 20
withholding tax, the transfer should be made
directly from one trustee to another.
26Tax Shelter FAQs
- Can I withdraw funds penalty free from my 401(k)
plan to purchase my first home? - If you are under the age of 59 1/2, you cannot
withdraw funds from your 401(k) plan to purchase
your first home without being subject to a 10
percent additional tax on early distributions
from qualified retirement plans. However,
depending on the rules for your 401(k), you may
be able to borrow money from your 401(k) to
purchase your first home. Your plan administrator
should have written information about your
particular plan that explains when you can borrow
funds from your 401(k) as well as other plan
rules
27Tax Shelter FAQs
- If I sell my home and use the money I receive to
pay off the mortgage, do I have to pay taxes on
that money? - It is not the money you receive for the sale
of your home, but the amount of gain on the sale
over your cost, or basis, that determines whether
you will have to include any proceeds as taxable
income on your return. You may be able to exclude
any gain from income up to a limit of 250,000
(500,000 on a joint return in most cases). If
you can exclude all of the gain, you do not need
to report the sale on your tax return.
28Tax Shelter FAQs
- If I take the exclusion of capital gain on the
sale of my old home this year, can I also take
the exclusion again if I sell my new home in the
future? - With the exception of the 2-year waiting period,
there is no limit on the number of times you can
exclude the gain on the sale of your principle
residence so long as you meet the ownership and
use tests.
29Tax Shelter FAQs
- What is the amount of capital gains from the sale
of a home that can be excluded if sold in less
than the two-year waiting period? - If you owned and lived in the property as your
main home for less than 2 years, you may still be
able to claim an exclusion in some cases. The
maximum amount you can exclude will be reduced.
30Tax Shelter FAQs
- Is interest on a home equity line of credit
deductible as a second mortgage? - You may deduct home equity debt interest, as an
itemized deduction, if you are legally liable to
pay the interest, pay the interest in the tax
year, secure the debt with your home, and do not
exceed your home equity debt limit.
31Tax Shelter FAQs
- I took out a home equity loan to pay off personal
debts. Is this interest deductible? Where do I
enter this amount on my tax return? - A loan taken out for reasons other than to buy,
build, or substantially improve your home, such
as to pay off personal debts may qualify as home
equity debt. The interest would be deducted on
line 10, Form 1040 Schedule A Itemized
Deductions. You may not deduct interest on any
amount of home equity debt that exceeds your home
equity debt limit, which generally is 100,000.
32Tax Shelter FAQs
- Who invests in abusive tax schemes?
- Individuals and business entities with large,
constant streams of income or with substantial
gains from one-time events may invest in abusive
tax schemes.
33Tax Shelter FAQs
- Why did abusive tax schemes become so common?
- Abusive tax schemes multiplied in the 1990's for
various reasons - Taxpayers had large capital gains or other
income subject to income tax. - Internal Revenue Service compliance
activity decreased. - Promoters increased the marketing of
abusive tax schemes as 'legally defensible' ways
to minimize tax burdens. - Penalties for participating in abusive
tax schemes were too small to have a deterrent
effect. - There was no efficient disclosure and
reporting system for abusive tax schemes
34Tax Shelter FAQs
- I am considering a tax shelter investment. How
can I recognize an abusive tax shelter? - Tax shelters reduce current tax liability by
offsetting income from one source with losses
from another source. The IRS allows some tax
shelters, but will not allow a shelter which is
"abusive." An abusive shelter generally offers
inflated tax savings which are disproportionately
greater than your actual investment placed at
risk. Generally, you invest money to generate
income. However, an abusive tax shelter generates
little or no income, and exists solely to reduce
taxes unreasonably for tax avoidance or evasion.
In comparison, a legitimate tax shelter often
produces income and involves a risk of loss
proportionate to the expected tax benefit.
Abusive tax shelters are often marketed in terms
of how much you can write off in relation to how
much you invest. This "write off" ratio is often
much greater than two-to-one as of the close of
any of the first five year ending after the date
on which the investment is offered for sale. A
series of tax laws have been designed to halt
abusive tax shelters. An organizer of a
potentially abusing tax shelter who doesn't
maintain a list of investors is subject to
penalty of 50 per failure, per person, unless
due to a reasonable cause and not willful
neglect.
35Additional Readings
- http//www.unclefed.com/Audit-Proofing/step4-3.htm
l - http//www.irs.gov/businesses/corporations/article
/0,,id120633,00.html - CCH-JOURNAL, TAXES-The Tax Magazine, March 2004,
Observations on Disclosure, Transparency and
Taxpayer Compliance.
36References
- http//www.irs.gov/faqs/faq-kw195.html
- http//www.ftb.ca.gov/law/tax_shelter/ats_faq.html
- http//www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id
106788,00.html - http//www.irs.gov/businesses/corporations/article
/0,,id120633,00.html
37Appendix
38IRC
- 6111. REGISTRATION OF TAX SHELTERS
- (a)(1) IN GENERAL. --Any tax
shelter organizer shall register the tax shelter
with the Secretary (in such form and in such
manner as the Secretary may prescribe) not later
than the day on which the first offering for sale
of interests in such tax shelter occurs. - (a)(2) INFORMATION INCLUDED IN
REGISTRATION. --Any registration under paragraph
(1) shall include -- - (a)(2)(A) information identifying
and describing the tax shelter, - (a)(2)(B) information describing the
tax benefits of the tax shelter represented (or
to be represented) to investors, and -
39IRC
- (a)(2)(C) such other information as the Secretary
may prescribe - (b) FURNISHING OF TAX SHELTER IDENTIFICATION
NUMBER INCLUSION ON RETURN. - (b)(1) SELLERS, ETC. --Any person who sells (or
otherwise transfers) an interest in a tax shelter
shall (at such times and in such manner as the
Secretary shall prescribe) furnish to each
investor who purchases (or otherwise acquires) an
interest in such tax shelter from such person the
identification number assigned by the Secretary
to such tax shelter. - (b)(2) INCLUSION OF NUMBER ON RETURN. --Any
person claiming any deduction, credit, or other
tax benefit by reason of a tax shelter shall
include (in such manner as the Secretary may
prescribe) on the return of tax on which such
deduction, credit, or other benefit is claimed
the identification number assigned by the
Secretary to such tax shelter.
40IRC
- (C) Tax shelter
- (c)(1) IN GENERAL. --The term "tax shelter" means
any investment -- - (c) (A) with respect to which any person could
reasonably infer from the representations made,
or to be made, in connection with the offering
for sale of interests in the investment that the
tax shelter ratio for any investor as of the
close of any of the first 5 years ending after
the date on which such investment is offered for
sale may be greater than 2 to 1, and - (c) (A)(B) which is --
- (c) (A) (B) (i) required to be registered under a
Federal or State law regulating securities, - (c) (A) (B) (ii) sold pursuant to an exemption
from registration requiring the filing of a
notice with a Federal or State agency regulating
the offering or sale of securities, or - (c) (A) (B) (iii) a substantial investment.
41IRC
- (d) CERTAIN CONFIDENTIAL ARRANGEMENTS TREATED AS
TAX SHELTERS. - (d)(1) IN GENERAL. --For purposes of this
section, the term "tax shelter" includes any
entity, plan, arrangement, or transaction -- - (d)(1)(A) a significant purpose of the structure
of which is the avoidance or evasion of Federal
income tax for a direct or indirect participant
which is a corporation, - (d)(1)(B) which is offered to any potential
participant under conditions of confidentiality,
and - (d)(1)(C) for which the tax shelter promoters may
receive fees in excess of 100,000 in the
aggregate.
42IRC
- 6112. ORGANIZERS AND SELLERS OF POTENTIALLY
ABUSIVE TAX SHELTERS MUST KEEP LISTS OF INVESTORS
- (a) IN GENERAL. --Any person who --
- (a)(1) organizes any potentially abusive tax
shelter, or - (a)(2) sells any interest in such a shelter,
- shall maintain (in such manner as the Secretary
may by regulations prescribe) a list identifying
each person who was sold an interest in such
shelter and containing such other information as
the Secretary may by regulations require.
43IRC
- (b) POTENTIALLY ABUSIVE TAX SHELTER. --For
purposes of this section, the term "potentially
abusive tax shelter" means -- - (b)(1) any tax shelter (as defined in section
6111) with respect to which registration is
required under section 6111, and - (b)(2) any entity, investment plan or
arrangement, or other plan or arrangement which
is of a type which the Secretary determines by
regulations as having a potential for tax
avoidance or evasion.
44IRC
- 6707. FAILURE TO FURNISH INFORMATION REGARDING
TAX SHELTERS. - (a) FAILURE TO REGISTER TAX SHELTER. --
- (a)(1) IMPOSITION OF PENALTY. --If a person who
is required to register a tax shelter under
section 6111(a) -- - (a)(1)(A) fails to register such tax shelter on
or before the date described in section
6111(a)(1), or - (a)(1)(B) files false or incomplete information
with the Secretary with respect to such
registration, - such person shall pay a penalty with respect to
such registration in the amount determined under
paragraph (2) or (3), as the case may be. No
penalty shall be imposed under the preceding
sentence with respect to any failure which is due
to reasonable cause.
45IRC
- (a)(2) AMOUNT OF PENALTY. --Except as provided in
paragraph (3), the penalty imposed under
paragraph (1) with respect to any tax shelter
shall be an amount equal to the greater of -- - (a)(2)(A) 1 percent of the aggregate amount
invested in such tax shelter, or - (a)(2)(B) 500.
- (a)(3) CONFIDENTIAL ARRANGEMENTS. --
- (a)(3)(A) IN GENERAL. --In the case of a tax
shelter (as defined in section 6111(d)), the
penalty imposed under paragraph (1) shall be an
amount equal to the greater of --
46IRC
- (a)(3)(A)(i) 50 percent of the fees paid to all
promoters of the tax shelter with respect to
offerings made before the date such shelter is
registered under section 6111, or - (a)(3)(A)(ii) 10,000.
- Clause (i) shall be applied by substituting "75
percent" for "50 percent" in the case of an
intentional failure or act described in paragraph
(1). - (a)(3)(B) SPECIAL RULE FOR PARTICIPANTS REQUIRED
TO REGISTER SHELTER. --In the case of a person
required to register such a tax shelter by reason
of section 6111(d)(3) -- - (a)(3)(B)(i) such person shall be required to pay
the penalty under paragraph (1) only if such
person actually participated in such shelter, - (a)(3)(B)(ii) the amount of such penalty shall be
determined by taking into account under
subparagraph (A) (i) only the fees paid by such
person, and - (a)(3)(B)(iii) such penalty shall be in addition
to the penalty imposed on any other person for
failing to register such shelter.
47IRC
- (b) FAILURE TO FURNISH TAX SHELTER IDENTIFICATION
NUMBER. -- - (b)(1) SELLERS, ETC. --Any person who fails to
furnish the identification number of a tax
shelter which such person is required to furnish
under section 6111(b)(1) shall pay a penalty of
100 for each such failure. - (b)(2) FAILURE TO INCLUDE NUMBER ON RETURN. --Any
person who fails to include an identification
number on a return on which such number is
required to be included under section 6111(b)(2)
shall pay a penalty of 250 for each such
failure, unless such failure is due to reasonable
cause.