Title: Taxing Farmers
1Taxing Farmers
- Income Averaging,
- Self-employment
- (and some QPAI)
2Overview
- Income Averaging Some Overlooked Opportunities
- Self-Employment Taxes Selected Base Issues
- Farmland rents?
- Investment or Self-employment income?
- Section 199 Basics Can Farmers Benefit?
3Income Averaging The Problem
- Variable Income Streams
- Production variation
- Commodity price volatility
- Variable expenditure patterns (e.g. 179)
- Graduated Tax Rates
- Effects exacerbated by phase-out provisions
- Fixed Annual Accounting Periods
4Income Averaging
- The Partial Solution IRC 1301
- Added in 1997 after a decade-long absence
- 1301 recomputes liability by reducing current
year tax base by an elected amount and allocating
it equally among three prior tax years.
- You get tax savings if prior tax years have
marginal rates lower than the current year
rates.
5Taxpayer A No Variation
6Taxpayer B Variation (No Avg)
7Variation 60K Averaging
20K allocated to Y1-Y3, capturing 10 and 15
rates lost in prior years
8Key Limitations
- Equal amount assigned to each base year
recapture of lost marginal rates is not complete
- For this reason, planners need to be familiar
with other deferral provisions to smooth out
single year variations as much as practicable.
- Averaging affects tax rates, not tax base for
purpose of computing eligible tax benefits. Eg
- Bad Still subject to section 68 limitation on
itemized deductions even though averaging
- Good Allocation to base years does not trigger
new limitations on itemized deductions
9Key Limitations Contd
- Taxpayers still lose other phase-out benefits,
despite averaging.
- Self-employment tax base not affected by
averaging.
- AMT Jobs Act provides relief for 2004 ff.
- Kiddie Tax rate determined after election
effects (benefit for taxpayer)
- Averaging election can be made for capital and
ordinary income amounts.
10EligibilityFarming business
- cultivation of land or the raising or harvesting
of any agricultural commodity 1.263A-4(a)(4).
- Custom harvesting is not farming
- Plant retailer not farming
- Regulations dont speak to custom feeding of
animals a common arrangement for livestock
production
11Some jurisdictions take food production more
seriously than others.
12Eligibility Individuals
- C-Corporations No soup for you!
- Others sole proprietor, partner, S-corporation
shareholder, LLC member (unless taxed as C
corporation)
- Entity activity, not individual activity, is
critical.
- Landlord may be eligible for crop share income,
despite lack of material participation.
- Careful, though, as C-Corp salaries dont count
(but S Corporation salaries do! See Reg.
1.1301-1(e)(1))
13Eligibility Electible Farm Income
- Attributable to farming business
- Follows parameters of farming outlined above.
- Incidental activities can be included (e.g.,
washing and packaging income) (1.263A-4)
- Further processing cannot (e.g., income
associated with processing wheat into pasta, or
livestock into packaged meat)
- Query Is an allocation method permitted?
14Electible Farm Income Contd
- Example Is a vineyard with a winery eligible?
How about grinding hay before delivery to a
feedlot customer? (common as further processing)
- Note that sales of business property regularly
used for a substantial period are eligible
(but not farmland).
- Such sales are regular occurrences in many farm
operations (e.g., culling breeding herds)
- Retiring farmers may thus benefit from some
dispositions of property, but still face bunching
of income on gains on sale of land (LTCG rate
compensates somewhat for this concern.)
15Making the Election
Election can be made for any open year,
regardless of whether adjustment is made by the
IRS for that year. This approach allows nearly
perfect hindsight, allowing taxpayers greater
flexibility to benefit from the election.
16Planning Keep Looking Back!
- Consider elections for prior open years to shift
income to earlier base years, thus increasing
their capacity to absorb averaged income.
- This could be helpful even if tax savings from
election in that year are not achieved.
- Illustrations can be found in article appended to
outline.
17Social Security Self Employment
- Some Basics
- OASDI Taxes total 12.4
- Equal shares (6.2) imposed on ER, EE (See I.R.C.
3101, 3111)
- Expanding tax base 94,200 in 2006, up from
90,000 in 2005
- Self-employed get to deduct half of
self-employment taxes, approximating the
treatment of employers who may deduct taxes paid
on employees. (See I.R.C. 164(f))
18Social Security Self Employment
- Medicare portion of 2.9 applies without regard
to the 94,200 limit.
- Combined tax is thus 15.3 up to 94,200, and
2.9 thereafter on eligible base.
- Big Picture Significant Growth Here (See
following slides for perspectives)
19- Federal Government Receipts 1990-2004, 2005-10
(est.) (Source White House Budget Office, FY 2006
Budget Historical Tables)
20Self-Employment TaxesOverview
Indexing base to wage growth CPI (productivity
gains in index)
21(Source IRS Statistics of Income, Fall 2005).
22Taxpayer Impacts
- Taxpayers at lower income levels will often pay
more in employment taxes than in income taxes.
- Top Earner 14,412.60 in total employment taxes
(including employers share) in 2006.
- Effect of cap on OASDI base makes this tax
nominally regressive, but consider these facts
- Social security benefits are also capped.
- Benefits are not proportional to contributions
lower-earning taxpayers get proportionally more
(a higher replacement rate) than higher-earning
taxpayers. - Taxpayers who can do so may find it economically
advantageous to reduce self-employment taxes and
invest the savings in alternative investments,
including qualified retirement savings plans.
(See below). - Reform proposals raise concerns about an
expanding tax base and limited future benefits,
perhaps leading to even more pressure for
planning to reduce self-employment taxes.
23Self-Employment Income Base Excluded Items
- IRC 1402 excludes certain forms of income from
the self-employment tax base. Clearly excluded
are
- Capital gains 1231 gains
- Interest
- Dividends
- All share common characteristic of derivation
from capital, vs. labor or services
24Planning Benefit?
- Can taxpayer planning using capital-related
exclusions provide net benefits over and above
the social security benefit?
- Comprehensive cost/benefit analysis is
exceedingly complex, but even a simple analysis
shows real potential here.
25Baseline Benefits High Earner
- MAXIMUM EARNER Assumptions
- Born 6/15/1962
- Current (2006) earnings 94,200.00
- Expected future benefits (depending on retirement
age)
- 62 and 1 month in 2024 2,896.00
- 67 in 2029 4,854.00
- 70 in 2032 6,665.00
- http//www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/benefit6.cgi
26Baseline Benefits Middle Earner
- MIDDLE EARNER Assumptions
- Date of birth 6/15/1962
- Current (2006) earnings 40,000.00
- Expected future benefits (inflated)
- 62 and 1 month in 2024 1,825.00
- 67 in 2029 3,095.00
- 70 in 2032 4,284.00
- http//www.ssa.gov/cgi-bin/benefit6.cgi
27Comparison of Benefits
- Age 67 Benefits
- Monthly Annual
- High 4,854 58,248
- Middle 3,095 37,140
- Difference 1,759 21,108
- (Note above are retirement benefits only.
This does not take into account differential
value of disability coverage and death benefits
for survivors.)
28What Do Benefits Cost?
29Estimated Investment Growth
30Comparative Reward
- Estimated Return on Investment (Post-Retirement)
- Return Annual Monthly
- 4.00 16,370.07 1,364.17
- 6.00 24,555.10 2,046.26
- 8.00 32,740.13 2,728.34
- vs. SS benefit 21,108 1,759
- Note Above investment amounts assume legacy at
death no legacy from social security amount.
31Rental Income the Quandry
- Rental income from real estate or property is
connected to capital. An exclusion applies for
rent, including crop shares, for those besides
dealers in real estate. - BUT the statute excepts rental income if there is
an arrangement in which the landlord has
material participation in the production of
agricultural or horticultural commodities or
management of such production.
32IRC 1402(a)(1)
- The Rental Exclusion does not apply to any
income derived by the owner or tenant of land if
(A) such income is derived under an arrangement,
between the owner or tenant and another
individual, which provides that such other
individual shall produce agricultural or
horticultural commodities on such land, and
that there shall be material participation by the
owner or tenant (as determined without regard to
any activities of an agent of such owner or
tenant) in the production or the management of
the production of such agricultural or
horticultural commodities, and (B) there is
material participation by the owner or tenant (as
determined without regard to any activities of an
agent of such owner or tenant) with respect to
any such agricultural or horticultural commodity
33Fickle Finger of Fate
- Material participation requirement was originally
added to help farmers by getting them into the
social security system.
- Times have changed.
34Ginsburg Rule
- Every stick crafted to beat on the head of a
taxpayer will, sooner or later, metamorphose into
a large green snake and bite the Commissioner on
the hind part. Martin Ginsburg, The National
Office Mission, 27 Tax Notes 99, 100 (1985))
35Taxpayer Corollary
- A provision designed to single out taxpayers for
special benefits may metamorphose into a critter
that someday bites these taxpayers in the hind
parts.
36When you sense trouble, sometimes you just need
to keep your head down and keep moving.
37Rental Income Separating Capital and Labor
Returns
- Can a sole proprietor reduce her self-employment
tax base by leasing land that she owns to a
spouse or to another entity?
- McNamara v. Commissioner, 236 F.3d 410 (8th Cir.
2000), reversing Tax Court in three combined
cases Bot, Hennen, McNamara.
- Each case involved payment of FMV cash rent on
portion of land farmed by taxpayer
38Case Examples
- McNamara
- Mr. owns corporation.
- Mr. and Mrs. both hired as employees, with total
wages of 30K
- Mr. and Mrs. jointly own farmland rented to
corporation. No material participation reqd.
- Corporation pays rent for farmland, with net
rental income of 19-23K
39Case Examples
- Bot
- Mr. owns 160 acres.
- Mrs. owns 240 acres.
- Mr. employs Mrs. in farming operation, and she
rents her acres to him. No material
participation required in the agreement.
- Mrs. gets 15K/year wages, 18K/year rent.
40Case Examples
- Hennen
- Similar arrangement to Bot with Mrs. leasing
her acres to Mr. and employment arrangement with
Mrs.
- Lease silent on participation.
41Tax CourtArrangement Agreement
- While the concept of an agreement certainly
includes a contractual agreement, it is a broader
concept that would also include other forms of
agreements not necessarily arising from strict
contractual relationships. Consistent with its
dictionary definition, in most of the instances
where it is used in the Internal Revenue Code,
the word "arrangement" refers to some general
relationship or overall understanding between or
among parties in connection with a specific
activity or situation.
42Tax Court Policy Supports Broader Tax Base
- In determining whether compensation is
includible in self-employment income under
sections 1401-1403 such provisions are to be
broadly construed so as to favor coverage for
Social Security purposes. - The rental exclusion in section 1402(a)(1) is to
be strictly construed to prevent this exclusion
from interfering with the congressional purpose
of effectuating maximum coverage under the Social
Security umbrella.
438th Circuit
- Taxpayers did materially participate.
- However, Court was open to proof re connection
between participation and lease.
- What does it mean to be derived under an
arrangement?
448th Circuit
- Rents that are consistent with market rates very
strongly suggest that the rental arrangement
stands on its own as an independent transaction
and cannot be said to be part of an arrangement
for participation in agricultural production.
Id. at 413. The market rate exception, though
not in the statute, is a practical effect of the
derived under language. Id.
458th Circuit
- Remanded to hear proof on FMV. No one chose to
retry issue. TC holds for taxpayers no
deficiency.
- IRS Nonacquiescence.
46IRS Nonacq.
- If, under the overall scheme of farming
operations it was understood that the farmer
would materially participate in farm production,
and the farmer did in fact materially
participate, then the income received from the
lessee is subject to self-employment tax. The
Service continues to believe that this is the
correct result regardless of whether the material
participation was explicitly called for under the
written or oral lease. This interpretation best
promotes Congress intent that farmers who must
work for a living have their income replaced
through coverage under the social security
system.
47IRS Position
- Essentially, Farmers are in a worse position than
other businesses.
- E.g., Author of one article on this topic opens
discussion with fact that his company rents his
office from him, allowing service income to be
segregated from capital. - Policy of expanding base overrides horizontal
equity between similarly situated taxpayers?
(Recall the statute does single out this group)
48Some observations
- Taxpayers here behaved reasonably. They paid for
labor, and they did not inflate rental values.
- Rents were fixed and in cash, not dependent on
production returns (which as discussed below may
be problematic).
- Note that even interspousal arrangements were
respected a corporate entity was not required.
49Post-McNamara Taxpayer Loss
- Solvie, T.C. Memo 2004-55
- Taxpayers formed corporation and leased land and
hog production facilities to it.
- Expanded facilities involved per animal payments
to owners/employees. (Hog production requires
labor, which taxpayers provided.)
- Fixed rents for other land (29K) and facilities
(21K) dwarfed by per animal pmts. (44K)
50Solvie Partial Taxpayer Loss
- Court finds
- Failure of proof that payment was FMV rent for
building.
- Connection between production activity by Solvies
and payment. (Problem for crop share
arrangements?)
- But note IRS concedes propriety of exclusion of
other rent not dependent on this production
activity.
51What About Partnerships?
- Mizell v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1995-571
involved a partnership between father and sons,
in which father sought to exclude crop share
rentals for farmland from self-employment income.
Tax Court analyzed this in terms of arrangement,
much like Bot/McNamara. (In fact, Mizell is
cited for this approach).
52Alternative Partnership Approach
- Section 1402 is clear that self-employment income
includes a partners distributive share
(whether or not distributed) of income or loss
described in section 702(a)(8) from any trade or
business carried on by a partnership of which he
is a member. - Traditional partnership arrangements contemplate
profit as a product of capital and labor.
Guaranteed payments for services or capital
provide a means to segregate these components.
See I.R.C. 707(c). However, that segregation
is for limited purposes.
53Partnership Approach Contd
- 707(c) provides that guaranteed payments are
considered as made to one who is not a member of
the partnership, but only for the purposes of
section 61(a) (relating to gross income) and,
subject to section 263, for purposes of section
162(a) (relating to trade or business expenses).
(Note that 1402 is absent!) - See also Treas. Reg. 1.707-1(c) For the
purposes of other provisions of the internal
revenue laws, guaranteed payments are regarded as
a partners distributive share of ordinary
income.
54What About LLCs?
- Partnership tax structure seems problematic based
on above analysis. (Even non-farming businesses
could face challenges.)
- Disregarded entity status also presents
uncertainty could a bachelor accomplish the
same tax benefits that the Bots and Hennens did?
- One commentator (Sowell) suggests segregating
capital into S corporation in order to ensure
segregation of capital income. (Substance Form
challenges?) - Uncertainty here may gravitate toward use of
corporate entity. (Choice of entity
considerations are complex).
55Cooperatives and Self-Employment Income
- Bot v. Commissioner, 353 F.3d 595 (8th Cir.
2003), affirming 118 T.C. 138 (2002), involved
the question of whether self-employment taxes
applied to value-added payments from a farming
cooperative paid to members. The Eighth Circuit
affirmed the Tax Courts finding that these
payments represented income from carrying on a
trade or business through agents, and thus were
not excluded from the self-employment tax base.
56Bot contd
- Bots (retired farmers?) owned interests in
cooperative for corn processing.
- Retirement was potentially contestable due to
arrangements with sons that resembled partnership
activities. IRS did not challenge this,
however. - Members could meet obligations to deliver corn to
cooperative (MCP) from three different sources
(1) deliver own production (2) purchase from
others or (3) acquire corn from MCP through an
option pool arrangement, which involved corn
purchased by the MCP for the purpose of helping
members meet their delivery obligations. In each
case, the Bots used option pool corn, paying MCP
an acquisition fee of five cents per bushel.
57Bot- contd
- Bots received payments for value added
production by cooperative, which they
characterized as STCG.
- IRS said pmts. were self-employment income. Bots
carried on a trade or business of acquiring and
selling corn and corn products for profit through
the cooperative. - It appears that they delivered substantially more
grain than they were capable of growing and
receiving through crop share (700 acres x 150
bushels x ½ share 52,500 bushels of production.
Their option pool corn fees of 18,070 at five
cents per bushel translates into 361,400 bushels
more than 7 times as much.) - They chose cooperative, not corporation. Thus,
they carried on business through agents and
earnings s/t self-employment tax.
58Other Cooperative Issues
- Fultz brothers faced similar case also losing
(p. 14-15). They did not respect the corporate
form, and instead received pmts individually and
assigned them to corp. - Would different result obtain if retired farmer
delivered crop share rental to cooperative?
(Magnitude issue presented in Bot vs. means of
disposing of rental share?) - See Felber v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1992-418,
affd without published opinion, 998 F.2d 1018
(8th Cir. 1993) (retired wheat farmer whose
tenant sold crop share on his behalf not subject
to self-employment tax) - What of patronage dividend from passive rental
activity (e.g., based on fertilizer share)?
59Section 199 Issues Can Farmers Benefit?
- Basic Provisions.
- Deduction percentage.
- 2005-06 3 percent
- 2007-09 6 percent
- 2010 ff. 9 percent.
- Deduction base. The deduction is a percent of
the lesser of
- Qualified production activities income (QPAI)
(see below) or
- taxable income (or for individuals, adjusted
gross income subject to certain adjustments).
See I.R.C. 199(a) (d)(2).
60199 Basics
- What is QPAI? Domestic production gross receipts
(DPGR) sum of specified costs. (See
199(c)(1)).
- DPGR gross receipts derived from any lease,
rental, license, sale, exchange, or other
disposition of (I) qualifying production property
which was manufactured, produced, grown, or
extracted by the taxpayer in whole or in
significant part within the United States .
I.R.C. 199(c)(4)(A).
61199 Basics contd
- Qualifying production property (QPP) includes
tangible personal property.
- The scope of manufactured, produced, grown, or
extracted (MPGE) encompasses crops or livestock
grown by farmers within DPGR. See Prop. Reg.
1.199-3(d)(1)(including cultivating soil,
raising livestock, and fishing in MPGE).
62199 Basics contd
- MPGE also includes storage, handling, or other
processing activities (other than transportation
activities) within the United States related to
the sale, exchange, or other disposition of
agricultural products, provided the products are
consumed in connection with, or incorporated
into, the MPGE of QPP whether or not by the
taxpayer. - However, the taxpayer must be doing more than
packaging to qualify.
- Grain storage fees are specifically covered in an
example in the regulations as included within
DPGR. See Prop. Reg. 1.199-3(d)(5) Example 1.
63199 Basics contd
- Wage limitation deduction allowable is in any
case limited to the W-2 wages of the employer
for the taxable year. I.R.C. 199(b).
(Section 4.02(1)(a) of Notice 2005-14 and
1.199-2(a)(1) of the proposed regulations
confirm that this includes common law employees,
not independent contractors, partners, or
self-employment income.)
64199 Basics contd
- Regulations clarify that only one taxpayer may
obtain the deduction under section 199 for
production. Reg. 1.199-3(e)(1)
- If one taxpayer performs a qualifying
activity pursuant to a contract with another
party, then only the taxpayer that has the
benefits and burdens of ownership of the property
under Federal income tax principles during the
period the qualifying activity occurs is treated
as engaging in the qualifying activity. - Will custom feeding qualify? Unlikely to meet
benefits and burdens test.
- Sale of feed would qualify, however, raising
allocation issues.
65199 Basics- contd
- Pass-through entities. Deductions are applied at
the shareholder, partner, or similar level. See
id. 199(d)(1)(A). W-2 wages are also allocated
for this purpose to the partner level, subject to
additional limitations. See id. 199(d)(1)(B).
66199 Basics- contd
- Cooperatives. A special rule exists in 199(d)(3)
to address the issue of agricultural cooperatives
(as in Bot and Fultz, above). To the extent the
cooperative is engaged MPGR of an agricultural or
horticultural product, or marketing of such
products, and a patronage dividend or per-unit
written allocation taxable to the patron under
1385(a)(1) or (3) is received, then patrons are
allowed to take the deduction under section 199.
67Some Important Issues for Farmers
- Wage Limitation.
- Contract production may not count.
- Sole proprietors may get nothing if they dont
pay employees.
- Members of farming partnerships or LLCs, who do
not receive W-2 wages, and who provide the bulk
of services to the partnership may also not
benefit from this deduction to the extent W-2
wages paid to others are not significant. - Corporate formation may allow advantages,
especially to the extent that wage payment
allowed.
68Farmer Issues - 199
- But note increasing salaries to get greater 199
deduction may not make sense if higher employment
taxes result.
- Farmers who are not engaged in a trade or
business (i.e., retired farmers who rent land)
are not eligible.
69Farmer Issues- 199
- DPGR Examples
- Livestock or crops in
- Custom work out
- Hedging transactions in
- Special retail food/beverage rules (see outline)
- Note 5 de minimis rule allows you to treat all
income as DPGR.
- Otherwise, allocation is required.