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4th Quarter Tax Developments
January 28, 2012
Dear Clients and Friends:
The following is a summary of the most important tax developments that have occurred in the past three months that may affect you, your family, your investments, and your livelihood. Please call us for more information about any of these developments and what steps you should implement to take advantage of favorable developments and to minimize the impact of those that are unfavorable.
Payroll tax cut temporarily extended. The Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation
Act of 2011 was enacted late last year. It temporarily extends the two percentage
point payroll tax cut for employees, continuing the reduction of their Social
Security tax withholding rate from 6.2% to 4.2% of wages paid through Feb. 29,
2012. Shortly after its passage, the IRS instructed employers to implement the
new payroll tax rate as soon as possible in 2012 but not later than Jan. 31,
2012. The law also includes a "recapture" provision, which applies only to those
employees who receive more than $18,350 in wages during the two-month period
(i.e., two-twelfths of the 2012 wage base of $110,100). This provision imposes
an additional income tax on these higher-income employees in an amount equal
to 2% of the amount of wages they receive during the two-month period in excess
of $18,350 (and not greater than $110,100). In addition, under the new law,
the social security tax rate for a self-employed individual remains at 10.4%,
for self-employment income of up to $18,350 (reduced by wages subject to the
lower rate for 2012). Congress is going to try to negotiate a deal to extend
the payroll tax cut for all of 2012. If a deal is struck to extend it for the
full year, the recapture provision for employees would not apply.
Credit for hiring veterans extended and enhanced. A law enacted last
November extended and enhanced a credit for hiring qualified veterans. Before
the law was passed, the credit would have been available only if the qualified
veteran were hired before Jan. 1, 2012, and only certain veterans were considered
qualified veterans. The new law extends the credit for hiring qualified veterans,
adds two new classes of veterans who are considered qualified veterans, increases
the credit for hiring certain qualified veterans, "fast-tracks" the process
for certifying that an individual is a qualified veteran, and provides tax-exempt
employers with a credit against payroll tax for hiring qualified veterans. The
credit amount varies depending on a number of factors. It can be as high as
$9,600 for hiring a qualified disabled veteran. For an employer to qualify for
the credit, the qualified veteran must begin work for the employer before Jan.
1, 2013 and other requirements must be met.
New rules for deducting or capitalizing tangible property costs. The
IRS has issued new regulations for determining whether amounts paid to acquire,
produce, or improve tangible property may be currently deducted as business
expenses or must be capitalized. The regulations will affect virtually all taxpayers
that acquire, produce, or improve tangible property. They are comprehensive,
voluminous and virtually rewrite the rules in this area. For example, they provide
detailed definitions of "materials and supplies" and "rotable and temporary
spare parts" and prescribe new rules and elective de minimis and optional methods
for handling their cost. They also have rules for differentiating between deductible
repairs and capitalizable improvements, among many other items. The regulations
generally are effective in tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2011. However,
to add to their complexity, some of the new rules in the regulations do not
supersede prior IRS guidance.
New foreign asset reporting guidance and form. The IRS issued detailed
guidance on the new law requiring individuals with an interest in a "specified
foreign financial asset" during the tax year to attach a disclosure statement
to their income tax return for any year in which the aggregate value of all
such assets is greater than $50,000 (or a dollar amount higher than $50,000
as the IRS may prescribe). In addition, the IRS issued Form 8938 (Statement
of Specified Foreign Financial Assets), which individual taxpayers will use
starting in the 2012 tax filing season to report specified foreign financial
assets for tax year 2011. The guidance consists of detailed temporary regulations.
They define terms that apply for purposes of the reporting requirement; provide
rules to determine if a specified individual must file a Form 8938 with their
annual return; define what are specified foreign financial assets; detail what
information needs to be reported; provide guidelines for valuing specified foreign
financial assets; list exceptions to the reporting requirements; and describe
the penalties that apply for failure to comply with the reporting requirements.
Standard mileage rates flat or lower. The optional mileage allowance
for owned or leased autos (including vans, pickups or panel trucks) is 55.5 cents
per each business mile traveled after 2011. For 2011, it was 55.5 cents for miles
driven after June 30 and 51 cents per mile for miles driven before July 1. Further,
the 2012 rate for using a car to get medical care or in connection with a move
that qualifies for the moving expense deduction is 23 cents per mile. For 2011, it
was 23.5 cents for miles driven after June 30 and 19 cents per mile for miles driven before
July 1.
New Form 8949 replaces Form 1040, Schedule D-1. Many transactions that, in previous years, would have been reported on Form 1040, Schedule D or D-1 must be reported on Form 8949 if they occurred in 2011. Specifically, a taxpayer uses Form 8949 to report:
- The sale or exchange of a capital asset not reported on another form or schedule,
- Gains from involuntary conversions (other than from casualty or theft) of capital assets not held for business or profit, and
- Non-business bad debts.
The taxpayer uses Schedule D to figure the overall gain or loss from transactions reported on Form 8949 and to report capital gain distributions not reported directly on Form 1040, line 13, a capital loss carryover from 2010 to 2011, and certain specialized items.
Withholding requirement for government contractors repealed. A law enacted
in 2005 was to have required the Federal government and the government of every
state, political subdivision of a state, and instrumentality of a state or state
subdivision (including multi-state agencies) making certain payments to a person
providing any property or services (e.g., payments to a government contractor)
to deduct and withhold 3% from that payment. Although the withholding requirement
was originally set to apply to payments made after 2010, it was subsequently
deferred to apply to payments made after 2012. A law enacted in November 2011
repealed the government contractor withholding requirement.
As always we will keep you updated on any future tax law changes. If you have any questions on how the above changes might impact you, please don't hesitate to call us or we can discuss it at your annual tax appointment.
Thank you for your continued support.
Roy A. Lewis, E.A. and Joe W. Schiefer, E.A.
Reproduced with permission Checkpoint contents/Federal Library/Federal Editorial Materials/Tax Planning & Practice Guides (Special Studies) by Thomson Reuters/RIA ~ www.thomsonreuters.com
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