Title: Determining Gross Income
1DeterminingGross Income
2What is Gross Income?
- Code Section 61(a) defines gross income as
- except as otherwise provided in this
subtitle, gross income means all income from
whatever source derived...
3What is Income?
- Gross income is realized income that is not
excluded - Realization takes place when arms length
transaction occurs (sale of goods) - Taxable income is gross income less all deductions
4Tax vs. Financial Accounting
- Goals are not the same
- Financial accounting seeks to provide information
that decision makers find useful - Tax reporting seeks to collect revenue equitably
- Differences fall into two categories
- Temporary or timing differences
- Permanent differences
5Temporary Differences
- Arise when income is taxed either before or after
it is accrued for accounting purposes - Example prepaid rent generally is taxable when
received but is only included in financial
accounting income as it is earned - Create a deferred tax asset or deferred tax
liability on financial statements
6Permanent Differences
- Income that is not taxed but is reported for
financial accounting purposes - Example municipal bond interest generally is not
taxed but is recorded as income in financial
accounting records
7Return of Capital Principle
- Basis amount invested in an asset
- Basis can be recovered tax-free
- If the taxpayers return is more than basis, the
taxpayer has a gain - If taxpayers return is less than basis, the
taxpayer has a loss
8Investment Alternatives
- Investments yielding appreciation
- Tax deferred until gain is recognized
- Gain is frequently taxed at lower capital gains
rates - Investments yielding annual income
- Interest income is taxed annually at the marginal
tax rate for ordinary income dividends taxed
annually but currently at lower capital gains
rates
9The Tax Year
- Calendar year
- Individuals
- S corporations and partnerships have restrictions
on allowable tax years, so usually use a calendar
year - Fiscal year
- 12-month period ending on month other than
December - 52-to-53 week year (ends on same day)
- Corporations freely select tax year
10Short Tax Year
- A short-year tax return reports less than 12
months of operating results - Income must be annualized (adjusted to reflect 12
months of operations) - Required by businesses that change their tax year
- Not required in year entity begins or ends
business
11Accounting Methods
- Taxpayers can use different methods for financial
accounting and tax - Cash method receipt of cash or cash equivalents
determine income/expense recognition (subject to
constructive receipt doctrine) - Accrual method the all-events test determines
income/expense recognition
12Cash Method
- Income is recognized when cash or cash
equivalents received - Cash equivalents broadly defined to include
property and services - Cash equivalents included at fair market value
- A cash-basis taxpayer must recognize income when
an amount is - Credited to the taxpayers account
- Set apart for the taxpayer, or
- Made available in some other way to the taxpayer
13Constructive Receipt Doctrine
- Constructive receipt is a modification that
prevents cash basis taxpayers from turning their
backs on income - Income is not constructively received if
- The taxpayer is not entitled to the income
- The payor has insufficient funds from which to
make payment, or - There are substantial limitations or restrictions
placed on actual receipt
14Limits on Cash Method
- Businesses that carry inventory and sell
merchandise to customers generally must use the
accrual method to account for sales and purchases - Hybrid method accrual for sales of inventory
cost of goods sold cash method for other income
and expenses - Large corporations (gross receipts of more than
5 million) cannot use cash method
15Accrual Method
- Income is recognized when all events test is
met - All events have occurred that establish the right
to the income and - The income amount can be determined with
reasonable accuracy - If liability is in dispute, the all events test
is not satisfied until dispute is resolved
16Claim of Right Doctrine
- Claim of right doctrine modifies the normal
recognition rules for accrual basis taxpayers - Requires taxpayer to recognize income when
payment is received, regardless of whether money
may have to be repaid later - If taxpayer must return all or part of the
income, deduction allowed in repayment year
17Prepaid Income
- Prepaid Income is another exception to the
accrual method of accounting - Based on wherewithal to pay concept taxpayer
should be taxed when best able to pay the tax - Income must be reported when received
- Examples rent, interest, and royalty payments
- Refundable deposits are not prepaid income
18Assignment of Income Doctrine
- A taxpayer cannot assign earned income to a third
party to escape taxation - Earned income must be taxed to the taxpayer
rendering the services - Community property states (Arizona, California,
Idaho. Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas,
Washington, Wisconsin) - Allocate half of income to each spouse
- Income from property is taxed to taxpayer who
owns the property
19Interest Income
- Interest income from savings accounts,
certificates of deposit, corporate bonds, and
Treasury bills is included in gross income - Interest on state and local (municipal) bonds is
excluded from gross income - High income taxpayers may have a higher after-tax
return on municipal bonds than taxable bonds
offering a higher interest tax - Gain on the sale of tax-exempt securities must be
included gross income
20Original Issue Discount
- Some debt instruments are issued at prices below
their maturity values - This original issue discount (OID) is effectively
interest paid at maturity rather than
periodically over the debt instruments life - Both cash and accrual basis taxpayers recognize
OID income as it accrues - Exception Series EE bonds
21Market Discount
- Bonds purchased after issue in the open or
secondary market at a price below its stated
maturity value - Excess of redemption proceeds over cost is
recognized as ordinary income in year of
redemption - Electively, market discount can be accrued as
interest income over life of bond
22Below-Market-Rate Loans
- Interest-free or low interest rate loans are
frequently made between related parties - Interest income that is not actually received or
accrued may be imputed (treated as received or
accrued and taxed) at the applicable federal rate
of interest
23Gift Loan Exceptions
- Any gift loan of 10,000 or less is exempt from
the imputed interest rules - For gift loans of 100,000 or less
- Imputed interest cannot exceed the borrowers net
investment income for the year - If borrowers net investment income is no more
than 1,000, imputed interest is zero
24Other Loans
- Loan to employee imputed exchange of cash is
treated as taxable compensation (income to
employee and deduction for employer) - Loan to shareholder imputed exchange of cash is
treated as a dividend (taxable income to
shareholder, no deduction for corporation)
25Dividend Income
- Cash and FMV of other assets distributed by a
corporation from earnings and profits (EP) are
treated as dividends includable in the
shareholders income - 2003 Tax Act reduced tax rate to the 15 rate
applicable to long-term capital gains (5 rate
for individuals in 10 or 15 tax bracket) - Distributions in excess of EP are nontaxable
return of capital (reducing stock basis) - Distributions in excess of stock basis are taxed
as capital gain (as if stock is sold)
26Mutual Fund Dividends
- May pay dividends from gains they realize on the
sale of investment assets - These dividends are actually net long-term
capital gains and are called capital gains
distributions
27Dividend Reinvestment Plans
- Treated as if the shareholder receives the cash
and then purchases additional shares of stock
with the dividend income (constructive receipt
doctrine) - Value of dividend included in income
- It is important for each shareholder to keep
track of basis for all shares
28Stock Dividends
- Stock dividends are distributions of a
corporations own stock to its shareholder (stock
splits) - Usually stock dividends are not taxable to the
shareholder (unless shareholder has option of
receiving cash) - Shareholders simply own a greater number of
shares and the basis in their original holdings
is divided among all shares of stock now held
29Annuity Income
- Usually consists of a taxable and nontaxable
amounts - Nontaxable amount represents a return of capital
- Nontaxable amount of a payment is equal to the
Investment in annuity / expected return from
annuity x annuity payment received - If the amounts invested in the annuity were all
made by the employer (or by the employee using
pre-tax dollars), then the employees investment
is treated as zero
30Prizes and Awards
- Prizes, awards, gambling winnings, and treasure
finds are taxable - The fair market value of goods or services
received is included in gross income
31Government Transfer Payments
- Need-based payments, such as welfare payments,
school lunches food stamps, are excluded from
income - Unemployment compensation is taxable because it
is a substitute for wages that would be taxable
32Social Security Benefits
- Government devised a complex formula that can
result in the taxation of up to 85 of social
security benefits for taxpayers who have
significant other income while leaving benefits
completely tax free for those who have little
other income - MAGI AGI before any social security benefits
exempt interest income ½ of social security
benefits
33Social Security Benefits
- If MAGI is less than 25,000 for single
individuals or 32,000 for married couples, then
none of the social security benefits received are
taxable - Single taxpayers with MAGI above 34,000 and
married taxpayers with income above 44,000 can
be taxed on up to 85 of their benefits - Taxpayers between the above thresholds can be
taxed on up to 50 of their social security
benefits
34Damage Awards
- Damages for physical injuries are not taxed
(under the return of capital doctrine) - Damages for all other awards are taxed (viewed as
substitute for income that would otherwise be
taxable income) - Punitive damages are taxable
35Divorce-Related Payments
- A property settlement is simply a division of
assets (no income, no deduction) - Alimony is a legal shifting of income taxable
income to recipient and deductible by payor - First years alimony should not exceed average of
2nd and 3rd year payments by more than 15,000 - Child support fulfills a legal obligation to
support a child (no income, no deduction) - Both parties may benefit by negotiating an
increase in payment if it qualifies as alimony
36Discharge of Debt
- If a legal obligation is satisfied for less than
the outstanding debt, the amount of debt forgiven
represents an increase in the taxpayers wealth
and is subject to taxation - Exceptions are provided for debtors who are
bankrupt or insolvent
37Tax Benefit Rule
- If a taxpayer deducted an expense or loss in one
year but recovers the amount deducted in a
subsequent year, all or a portion of the amount
recovered may have to be included in the gross
income in the year it is recovered - Amount included in income is limited to the
extent the taxpayer benefitted from the tax
deduction - Example bad debt recovery or refund of taxes
previously deducted
38Exclusions
- Gifts
- Inheritances
- Life Insurance
- Proceeds received are tax-free but any interest
income on proceeds is taxable - Inside buildup (increase in cash surrender value)
is not taxable income unless policy is liquidated
for more than premiums paid
39Accident Health Insurance
- Accident health insurance proceeds are tax-free
to extent they pay qualified medical or dental
expenses excess benefits taxable if employer
provided policy - Disability insurance substitute for lost pay
- If premiums for disability insurance paid by
employer, then benefits received are taxable - If premiums paid by employee, exception allows
benefits to be received tax free
40Scholarships
- Qualified scholarships are excluded from gross
income - Scholarship includes only tuition, fees, books,
supplies, equipment, and related expenses
required for courses - Amounts designated or spent for room, board, and
laundry are included in taxable income
41Scholarships
- Any grant received in return for past, present,
or future services must be included in gross
income - Funds received by students in return for teaching
or research services are taxable - When taxable portion cannot be determined until
end of academic year, taxable income can be
deferred until the taxable year in which the
academic year ends
42Other Exclusions
- Improvements made on leased property are excluded
from landlords income unless improvements made
in lieu of paying rent - Fringe benefits (discussed in next chapter)
- Exclusion of gain on sale of home
- 250,000 if single, 500,000 if married and both
spouses qualify - Must have owned and lived in home as principal
residence for at least 2 of previous 5 years
43International Issues
- Source principal - countries tax income earned
within their borders but exclude income from
activities taking place (sourced) in other
countries - Applies to foreign persons and foreign
corporations - Residency principle countries tax worldwide
income - Applies to resident individuals and corporations
44Tax Treaty
- An agreement between two countries that explains
how a taxpayer of one country is taxed when
conducting business in a second country - Objective is to minimize double taxation
45International Taxation
- A business is usually only taxed in country of
residence unless it maintains a permanent
establishment (e.g. office) in another country - Source country can tax income earned within its
borders when a permanent establishment exists - Resident country allows taxpayer a foreign tax
credit up to tax paid in source country
46Taxpayers Subject to U.S. Tax
- U.S. citizens, corporations, and resident aliens
are subject to U.S. tax on their worldwide income - Resident alien individual who is not a U.S.
citizen but who has established legal residence
in U.S. through - Green card or
- Substantial presence test (183 days)
- Nonresident alien individual who is not U.S.
citizen and does not satisfy test to be resident
alien
47Nonresident Aliens and Foreign Corporations
- Effectively connected income U.S. business
income subject to U.S. income tax - Non-U.S. business income not subject to U.S.
income tax - U.S. investment income taxed at flat 30 (or
treaty rate if lower)
48State and Local Taxation
- Most states (and some local governments) impose
both corporate and individual income taxes on
both residents and nonresidents - Nonresidents can only be taxed on
- Income derived from business activity within that
state and - Income from property in that state
49State Tax Issues
- Nexus is the type and degree of connection
between a business and a state necessary for the
state to have the right to impose a tax - Multi-state businesses may be able to reduce
their overall tax cost by shifting income from a
high-tax state to a low-tax state
50Total Effective Tax Rate
- For federal tax purposes, state income tax is
deductible in computing taxable income - Tax savings from this federal deduction reduce
the cost of the state income tax - When a taxpayer pays income tax at both the
federal and state levels, it increases the total
effective tax rate and decreases the after-tax
cash flow
51Installment Method
- Gain is recognized as proceeds from sale are
received - Use severely restricted generally available for
casual sales only (excludes sales of inventory
and securities) - May not want to use if
- Marginal tax rate is expected to increase
- Unused losses are expiring
52Long-Term Contracts
- Completed Contract Method no income is
recognized and no deductions taken until contract
completion - Percentage-of-Completion Method income is
recognized as contract progresses based on an
estimate of actual costs incurred to total
projected costs for contract
53The End