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Taxation in Agriculture Chapter 19

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Title: Taxation in Agriculture Chapter 19


1
Taxation in AgricultureChapter 19
  • Kelly Braswell
  • Robby Adams
  • Jordan Smith

2
This Chapter covers
  • Tax laws that extend special treatment to farmers
    (especially income and estate).
  • Changes in federal tax legislation since 1986.

3
Tax Reform Act of 1986
  • Prior to the Tax Reform Act of 1986, tax benefits
    were available to nonfarm investors as well as
    farm operators.
  • The 1986 tax legislation curtailed the tax
    shelters and significantly reduced the
    attractiveness of investments in agriculture to
    nonfarm investors.

4
Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997
  • Brought the most significant tax reforms since
    the 1986 by providing targeted tax relief to many
    groups, including farmers.

5
Economic and Tax Reconciliation Act of 2001
  • Begins the series of tax reductions over ten
    years.
  • Also, this act greatly increases the uncertainty
    of tax law because it includes a provision that
    repeals all of the 2001 tax law changes at the
    end of 2010!

6
Questions to think about
  • What are the major tax advantages in agriculture?
  • How are tax advantages related to the system of
    progressive taxes?
  • What are the implications of tax preferences for
    agriculture?

7
Marginal Tax Rates and the Progressive Income Tax
  • Taxation affects personal decisions related to
    work that generates taxable income which will
    affect individual productivity.
  • It is expressed
  • marginal tax rate Change in tax liability
  • Change in taxable
    income

8
MTR continued
  • For example if the marginal tax bracket is 28
    and a persons taxable income is 100 then they
    must pay 28 in taxes.
  • The structure of the federal income taxes in the
    United States is progressive, which means that as
    the income increases the marginal tax rate
    increases so a person must pay more of taxable
    income.
  • The highest it has been is 38.6 in 2002.

9
MTR continued
  • There are two different approaches
  • The first being the Keynesian approach which
    stresses the importance of maintaining a high
    level of aggregate demand. Ex. increased
    government spending will lead to economic growth.
  • Taxes are merely a transfer and tax rates can
    vary with little impact on production.

10
MTR continued
  • The second is the newest thought which stresses
    the disincentive effects of taxes.
  • This thought process is rooted all the way back
    to Adam Smith and other classical economists.
  • Does three things
  • First, when mtr increases the opportunity cost of
    leisure decreases.

11
MTR continued
  • Second, high mtr not only discourage work, but
    also cause people to work on jobs where they are
    less producitive.
  • Third, high rates increase individuals incentive
    to engage in illegal activities and to evade
    taxes on legal economic transactions. Also known
    as the underground economy including drug
    trafficking, smuggling, prostitution, etc.
  • Legal but unreported include tips and cash sales
    sometimes called working off the books.

12
MTR continued
  • Finally, high mtr means that many valuable
    resources are devoted to the tax shelter
    industry. This means that people are willing to
    pay to have others find them tax breaks.
  • The 1986 Tax Reform Act significantly reduced the
    progressivity of the federal income tax.
  • Many changes to the Federal income tax system
    have been made making the system more complex.
    The amount of brackets has increased over the
    years.

13
Type of incentive by tax Advantage to farmers
14
Federal Income Tax and Agriculture
  • The most important tax advantages for agriculture
    are cash accounting and favorable depreciation
    rules, including the deductibility of certain
    capital expenditures.

15
Accrual verses Cash Accounting
  • Accrual accounting is generally required in
    calculating net income in the ordinary course of
    business.
  • Records must be kept on expenses, production,
    inventories, and sales for each year.
  • All sales are in a given year are treated as
    income in the year of sale regardless of whether
    the payment is received that year.
  • Expenses related to goods sold, are taken as
    offsets against income in the year of sale.
  • Unsold goods and purchased inputs are inventoried
    and included with income from sales of products
    in determining profits for tax purposes.
  • Inventories of unsold goods are counted as
    revenues even though they have not been sold.

16
Accrual verses Cash Accounting Continued
  • In cash accounting, income from the sale of a
    commodity is taxed in the year payment is
    received.
  • Inventories of unsold goods are ignored under
    cash accounting, but the cost related to these
    goods are deducted when the cost are paid.
  • Expenses generally can be deducted from taxable
    income in the year the expenses are paid rather
    than in the year in which the goods are sold
    excluding livestock purchased for resale.

17
Accrual verses Cash accounting continued
  • Farmers and other small business firms are
    permitted to use cash accounting rather than
    accrual because of the complex record keeping
    requirements required in accrual accounting.
  • Helps farmers because of the relatively long time
    period between the purchase of inputs and the
    sale of the commodity.
  • Before 1987 Corporations that were called family
    firms such as Tyson Foods, Hudson Foods Inc. and
    Perdue Farms Inc. received huge tax benefits from
    cash accounting. Today if receipts are over 25
    million they must use accrual methods of
    accounting.

18
Expensing verses Depreciation
  • Operating expenses incurred by farmers and other
    businesses are generally deductible as an offset
    to earned income.
  • Capital expenses are treated differently from
    operating expenses they are not deductible they
    must be depreciated.
  • A capital expense is a payment or debt incurred
    for the acquisition of an asset having a useful
    life of more than one year.
  • Beginning in 2003, farmers are able to deduct
    25,000 of newly acquired depreciable tangible
    personal property. Ex machinery and equipment

19
Expensing verses Depreciation continued
  • Depreciation periods generally are short relative
    to the expected life for most types of farm
    equipment.
  • Ex. Farm machinery and equipment items have a
    seven-year recovery
  • Ex. Single purpose agriculture buildings have a
    ten-year period.
  • The special tax treatment in depreciation rules
    for capital leads to use of too much capital in
    agriculture, relative to labor and land.

20
Expensing verses Depreciation continued
  • Expenditures incurred in the production of some
    farm products can be expensed, or fully deducted,
    in the year of purchase.
  • Ex. Cost of lime, fertilizer, and other materials
    that enrich the land for more than one year. Soil
    and water conservation expenditures on
    USDA-conservation projects.
  • Some farmers use the straight line depreciation
    method where others use the declining balance
    depreciation method.
  • There are tax benefits from being able to deduct
    the entire amount of capital expenditure in the
    year of purchase rather than merely deducting the
    amount of depreciation because the benefit from a
    cost deducted now is greater than if deducted
    later. Ex.

21
Gains on the Sale of Capital Assets
  • A change in value of a capital asset is not
    treated as income for tax purposes until the
    asset is sold.
  • Capital gains tax rates were reduced by the
    Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 for taxpayers in
    lower and higher tax brackets. The rates ranged
    from 8 to 28 in 2002.
  • The capital gains provision of the tax law is
    especially important to farmers because they are
    three times more likely to report capital gains
    than nonfarmers.

22
Estimated Taxes
  • Taxpayers generally are required either to have
    federal income taxes withheld on income received
    during the year or to make quarterly estimated
    tax payments and to file Form 1040 by April 15 of
    the following year.
  • If more than 2/3 of the income is from farming,
    however, quarterly estimated tax payments are not
    required.
  • There is, of course, an economic advantage to
    delaying the date on which taxes must be paid
    because of the time value of money. Qualified
    farmers however are allowed to file taxes March 1
    of the following year.

23
The Estate tax
  • The federal estate tax is a progressive tax on
    wealth transferred because of death. The tax is
    computed on the value of the property owned by
    the deceased and the tax is generally due nine
    months after death.
  • Two exceptions exist in ag
  • First, the FET may be calculated on the basis of
    agricultural use value rather than on the basis
    of market value.
  • Second, qualifying farms and other small
    businesses are given and extended time to pay the
    tax, during which time interest on estate taxes
    due accrues at a rate well below market rates.

24
Corporate Farming
  • Federal law generally does not place direct
    restrictions on the corporate form of ownership
    in farming.
  • Nine states which include Kansas, North Dakota,
    Oklahoma, Minnesota, South Dakota, Missouri,
    Iowa, Nebraska, and Wisconsin currently have
    restrictions on ownerships of farmland and
    operation of farm businesses by corporations
    except for family corporations.
  • Texas, West Virginia, and South Carolina also
    have minor restrictions.

25
Corporate Farming Continued
  • Two forms of taxing the income of farm
    corporations include the standard method which
    taxes income to the corporation and the
    alternative method permits shareholders to choose
    to have corporate income taxed to them
    individually.
  • There are some benefits to farmers for
    incorporating.
  • First, the total tax cost on corporate income
    will sometimes be lower than would be the case if
    the income were earned by an individual.

26
Corporate Farming continued
  • Second, with the incorporation and the transfer
    of shares of stock each year, farm transfers can
    be made more easily without physically dividing a
    farm.
  • Third, the cost of fringe benefits such as meals,
    health insurance, and group life insurance can be
    deducted by the corporation, by their value need
    not be included in the gross income of
    shareholders.
  • In addition, corporate ownership has the
    advantages of limited liability, and it provides
    a means of pooling capital.

27
Corporate Farming continued
  • There are two types of farm corporation
  • Family-held corporations and those with nonfamily
    stockholders.
  • Family-held are far more common and most have not
    more than ten stockholders. These represent only
    about 4 of all farms and approximately 23 of
    all farm product sales in 1997.
  • Non family corporate farms constituted less than
    one-half of one percent of all farms in 1997, but
    accounted for approximately 6 of total farm
    product sales.

28
Farming As A Tax Shelter
  • A tax shelter is an investment that allows
    taxpayers to reduce or eliminate tax liabilities
    on income by using preferential provisions of
    income tax laws.
  • Prior to the Tax Reform Act of 1986, U.S. tax
    laws favored agriculture investments in four
    ways.
  • 1) the option of using cash rather than
    accrual accounting
  • 2) The opportunity to expense certain capital
    investments
  • 3) a lower tax rate on capital gains than on
    ordinary income
  • 4)investment tax credits.

29
Implications for Agriculture
  • Three reasons why tax laws have an impact on
    agriculture.
  • First, tax preferences are more valuable the
    higher the marginal tax return.
  • Second, the federal tax system affects the
    resource mix within agriculture.
  • Third, preferential tax policies tend to attract
    additional resources into agriculture, bringing
    about an increase in farm output. The Tax Reform
    Act of 1986, however, reduced the attractiveness
    of agriculture as a tax shelter and the incentive
    to invest in agriculture.

30
The End
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