1 / 46

Taxes

Taxes. Ag Management Chapter 9. Objectives. State the importance of income tax planning. Describe what is necessary to be considered a farmer or rancher. Discuss how long to keep income tax records. State the steps to use when determining income tax strategies.

kyne
Télécharger la présentation

Taxes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Taxes Ag Management Chapter 9

  2. Objectives • State the importance of income tax planning. • Describe what is necessary to be considered a farmer or rancher. • Discuss how long to keep income tax records. • State the steps to use when determining income tax strategies. • Describe how income and expenses are reported • List the ways to depreciate assets • List the ways to level out income for tax management purposes • Describe what FICA is and how it is paid • Define agricultural labor • Discuss the objectives of estate planning • Define estate tax and identify ways to reduce or eliminate it.

  3. The Purpose of Income Tax Management • Knowledge and awareness of tax regulations can assist in decision making processes

  4. A Manager & Taxes • Not experts • Basic knowledge is helpful • Most popular publication for farmers and ranchers is Publication 225 • Can be obtained from any tax office

  5. Special Laws for Specialization • Because agriculture includes many specialized areas, tax laws for agriculture are also specialized

  6. 3 Examples of Special Tax Laws • Special accounting methods despite high year-end inventories • Special capital expenditure deductions • Treatment of livestock as a capital asset is unique.

  7. Those That Can Tax Advantage of Special Tax Law • Must be a farmer or rancher & materially involved • Must cultivate, operate or manage a farm or ranch for gain of profit • Farming or ranching does not include timber or forestry production • Does not include people who receive a fixed rent in cash or produce from a farm operation

  8. Income Tax Management • Attempts to maximize after tax profits • Includes completion and filing of the correct tax forms • Tax accountants are used for this task

  9. Choosing the Best Accounting System • Adopt the system that is best suited to your situation • Remember the two types of accounting used by farm and rancher managers are • Cash • Accrual

  10. Cash Accounting Method • Income and expenses are recorded in the period in which they are actually received or paid • Inventory plays no major role • Income is taxed when it is received and expenses are deducted when they are paid.

  11. Cash Accounting Method Advantages Disadvantages Inaccurate measure of profitability for the time period Income variations • Easier • Flexible • Simpler than the accrual method

  12. Accrual Method • Records income when it is earned • Records expenses when they occur • Used as an inventory in addition to the record of receipts and expenses • An increases in the year end inventory is treated as taxable income • A decrease in the inventory reduces taxable income

  13. Accrual Method Advantages Disadvantages Requires more record keeping Can create tax liability from items not yet sold • Accurate measure of profitability during the period • Reduces variations in income

  14. Income & Expenses • Summarized on Form 1040 • 1040 is divided into 2 parts • Farm Income • Farm Expense • See p. 9-5

  15. Farm Income • Lines 1-10 on form 1040 • Includes • Sales of livestock and other items purchased for resale • Sales of livestock and crops raised • Government payment programs • Patronage Refunds • Crop Insurance Proceeds • Custom Hire

  16. Farm Expenses • Lines 12-34 on Form 1040 • Includes • Feed, seed, fertilizer, fuel & labor • Depreciation, rent and interest • Repairs, taxes, utilities, storage

  17. Net Farm Profit • Gross income (line 11)-Total Expenses(line 37) • If there is a net farm profit it is included in taxable income • If there is a net farm loss it can be used to offset other income

  18. Depreciation • Spreads out the value of assets over the period they are used • Depreciation of assets allows for the loss in the assets value • Losses in value are caused by • Wear and Tear • Obsolescence due to new technology • Deterioration due to the elements of nature

  19. Depreciation • The proportion of the original cost to be depreciated in any one year is largely a matter of judgment and financial management • Aspects that influence financial management • Influence deprecation has on income taxes • Desire to have the undepreciated value of an asset reflect the resale value of the asset • Depreciation allowance taken in any year reflects the actual decline in the value of the asset • Therefore net worth statements show the ACTUAL value of depreciable assets

  20. Guidelines for Determining Property Subject to Depreciation • Depreciable farm property includes all assets used in the business of farming that have a useful life of more than 1 year. • Only assets which have a limited and determined useful life may be depreciated. • Capital expenditures for assets which do not have a determined life, such as land or leasehold interests which are continuously renewed are not deductible. Tax benefits of these assets are not realized until they are sold or lost,

  21. Factors to Know Before Figuring Depreciation Basis- What is the basis in the property? This includes the cash paid or the cash difference paid plus the depreciable balance of their trade-in. When is the property put into service. Which method of depreciation is used.

  22. Methods of Depreciation • Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) • General Depreciation System (GDS) • In IRS publications depreciation is referred to as recovery cost • Farm assets fall into 4 categories • 3 year • 5 year • 7 year • 20 year

  23. Regular MACRS for Personal Property • Determined by multiplying the statutory percentages for that class of property by the cost basis of the item. • See p. 9-7

  24. Section 179 Expense Deduction • Read p. 9-8-9-9

  25. Other Characteristics of Depreciation • Income tax benefits arise because the cost of capital asset is recovered over the useful life of the asset. The shorter the life assigned to the asset, the quicker the income tax benefit is received. • Raised livestock may not be depreciated when the cash accounting method is used because all costs have been deducted as cash expenses. • Nonbreeding livestock in inventory may not be depreciated using the cash accounting method • Expensing will affect cost recovery by reducing the cost basis of the property.

  26. Strategies to Increase Taxable Income • Postpone expenditures and investments until after the beginning of the next tax year • Sell marketable grain and livestock before the end of the tax year • Work with suppliers to pay bills after the beginning of the next tax year • Do not use section 179 expensing for depreciable property • Do some off-farm or custom work

  27. Strategies to Reduce Taxable Income • Postpone some sales to next year • Use deferred sales contracts • Buy NEEDED machinery, equipment, and other supplies BEFORE the end of the tax year to get depreciation. • Use section 179 expensing for the maximum on depreciable property. • Make advanced purchases of feed and fertilizer.

  28. Special Tax Situations • See table D p. 9-11

  29. Income Tax Differences Between Types of Farms

  30. Social Security Taxes and Benefits

  31. Agricultural Coverage • Generally covered by Social Security • Earnings must come from employment or self employment

  32. Agricultural Labor • Farm employees have SS deducted • Farm employer pays into employees SS account

  33. Farm Employers and Employees Must Pay SS tax when • The employee receives cash wages of at least $150 from any one farm employer during the calendar year • The employee works for any one farm employer on 20 or more days for cash wages computed on a time basis • The employer pays wages of $2500 or more during the year to all employees

  34. Family Labor • Certain family situations allow for no tax being due and no benefits resulting • A spouse working for a spouse • A parent working for a child unless the parent works in the child’s trade or business • A child under 21 works for his or her parent

  35. Defining Ag Labor • All the work that is performed on the farm or ranch in employ of any person

  36. What is an Employee?? • As defined by Social Security Law: • An employee performs services for another, and is subject to the control of the employer.

  37. Independent Contractors • One who agrees to perform certain services for a fixed price • Contractor must meet the specifications of the employer • Manner of doing the job and details is retained by the contractor • Independent contractor is the employer of his own employees • Must also pay self-employment taxes and employer taxes for employees • Example: professional electrician that is hired for a fee to repair an irrigation well pump

  38. Self-Employed Farmers • Must pay self employment tax • Based on the net earnings from the farm business • Shown on schedule F (Form 1040) • Computed on schedule SE (Form 1040) • Paid when the farmer files his income tax return • Children may also have to pay self-employment tax is they carry on an activity of their own such as 4-H or FFA and have a net earning of $400 or more

  39. Employers of Agricultural Labor • Employers of agricultural labor are responsible for several administrative task. They must… • Have an Employer’s Identification Number • It is used on all forms that report the employer’s Social Security tax payments • Keep Records for each employee • name, social security number, cash wages, daily records of time worked, basis of payment and the amount deducted as the employees share of the social security tax • Withhold tax from the employees wages. • Make reports to the IRS by Jan. 1 each year and send a W-2 for showing that employees wages and taxes withheld to the employee • Pay Social Security taxes levied upon employer and employee • Pay Social Security taxes on a periodic basis, depending on the amount collected.

  40. Social Security Benefits and Medicare • Types of benefits • Old age and survivor • Survivor • Disability • Hospital & medical (Medicare) Old Old Age Social Security Benefits Hospital And Medical Disability

  41. Estate Taxes • Also called inheritance tax • Federal Govt. levies a gift tax on transfers during life and estate tax at death • Inheritance tax is generally collected by state govt.

  42. Estate Planning • Planning the acquisition, enjoyment, and distribution of property for the benefit of the family • Wills • Are a form of estate planning • Needed by everyone • Without the state will distribute property as it sees fit

  43. Estate Transfer • Death forces an estate transfer • Always problems with this due to • Inheritance rights and interests of children in parents property • Problem is frequently complicated by having to provide for a widow and children and the desire to treat all children equally • Parents also need the farm to provide income and support in old age • Due to these problems families often delay planning until it is to late

  44. Unified Federal Estate & Gift Tax • Federal government levies a gift tax on transfers during life and an estate tax on transfers after death • Rate schedule is the same for both

  45. Income Taxes Affect Estate Planning • Also a concern in tax planning • Income tax savings during life may create additional capital to be used or passed on • The way wills or trust are drawn up will also determine how much the beneficiaries will have to pay in income tax

  46. Assignment • Complete Assignment Sheets 1 & 2 due Thursday Nov 15. • Complete ch 9 Review Questions due the end of the period Friday Nov 16. Complete question #’s- 1-6, 10-12, 14,16,18,19,21,22,24,25-28 • Ch 9 Test will be next week Wednesday.

More Related