Posts Tagged ‘Tax’

Overview of the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

Author: Gary Wallace, CPA, Principal

The recently enacted “Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010” is a sweeping tax package that includes, among many other items, an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for two years, estate tax relief, a two-year “patch” of the alternative minimum tax (AMT), a two-percentage-point cut in employee-paid payroll taxes and in self-employment tax for 2011, new incentives to invest in machinery and equipment, and a host of retroactively resuscitated and extended tax breaks for individuals and businesses. Here’s a look at the key elements of the package:

·       The current income tax rates will be retained for two years (2011 and 2012), with a top rate of 35% on ordinary income and 15% on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains.

·       Employees and self-employed workers will receive a reduction of two percentage points in Social Security payroll tax in 2011, bringing the rate down from 6.2% to 4.2% for employees, and from 12.4% to 10.4% for the self-employed.

·       A two-year AMT “patch” for 2010 and 2011 will keep the AMT exemption near current levels and allow personal credits to offset AMT. Without the patch, an estimated 21 million additional taxpayers would have owed AMT for 2010.

·       Key tax credits for working families that were enacted or expanded in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 will be retained. Specifically, the new law extends the $1,000 child tax credit and maintains its expanded refundability for two years, extends rules expanding the earned income credit for larger families and married couples, and extends the higher education tax credit (the American Opportunity tax credit) and its partial refundability for two years.

·       Businesses can write off 100% of their equipment and machinery purchases, effective for property placed in service after September 8, 2010 and through December 31, 2011. For property placed in service in 2012, the new law provides for 50% additional first-year depreciation.

·       Many of the “traditional” tax extenders are extended for two years, retroactively to 2010 and through the end of 2011. Among many others, the extended provisions include the election to take an itemized deduction for state and local general sales taxes in lieu of the itemized deduction for state and local income taxes; the $250 above-the-line deduction for certain expenses of elementary and secondary school teachers; and the research credit.

·       After a one-year hiatus, the estate tax will be reinstated for 2011 and 2012, with a top rate of 35%. The exemption amount will be $5 million per individual in 2011 and will be indexed to inflation in following years. Estates of people who died in 2010 can choose to follow either 2010′s or 2011′s rules.

·       Omitted from the new law: Repeal of a controversial expansion of Form 1099 reporting requirements.

·       Also not included: Extension of the Build America Bonds program, which permits state and localities to issue federally-subsidized municipal bonds.

We have created the following articles and client alerts that dive deeper into each aspect of the new Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010.  Over the following days we will post more detailed information on each of the key components.

We hope this information is helpful. If you would like more details about these provisions or any other aspect of the new law, please do not hesitate to contact your Keiter Stephens engagement partner.

Qualified Therapeutic Discovery Program (QTDP) awards – What you need to know

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Author: Rick White and Robert Tobey

Qualified Therapeutic Discovery Program (QTDP) awards were recently issued and 45 biotechnology companies in Virginia were awarded more than $11 million in federal tax credits and grants.  Accounting for those funds under tax basis accounting as well as Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) can be difficult. The grants themselves are not taxable, but many grant recipients will need to amend their 2009 tax returns in order to take full advantage of the grants.  They may also need to make certain elections with their 2010 filings.

How to account for the grants under GAAP is a little less clear.  Some have suggested that since the awards were based upon research and development expenditures that the R&D costs should be reduced by the amount of the grants.  However, most experts seem to feel that the grants should be recognized “below the line” (below operating income) as an other, non-recurring income.

Very few CPAs are familiar with the QTDP grants, however, the clients that we helped submit QTDP applications received 18% of the total grant amounts awarded in the state of Virginia.    If you have questions on QTDP issues or other biotech, life-sciences, I.T. or technology business concerns, please contact Rick White or Robert Tobey.

Full Phase-In of the Domestic Production Activities Deduction at 9% in 2010

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Internal Revenue Code Section 199 (Sec 199) was enacted to help offset the repeal of a tax break for U.S. exporters.  Since 2004, Sec 199 has given U.S. manufacturers tax relief in the form of a deduction of a percentage of qualifying expenses.  The deduction started at 4% for tax years 2004 – 2006, increased to 6% for tax years 2007 – 2009 and will be 9% for 2010 and all following years.  In order to be eligible for the Sec 199 deduction, the taxpayer must have qualified production activities income (QPAI) which is domestic production gross revenue (DPGR) for the tax year minus costs of goods sold and other expenses or deductions allocable to those receipts.

DPGR includes the gross receipts of a taxpayer derived from any lease, rental, license, sale, exchange, or other disposition of qualifying production property (QPP).  Common forms of QPP are:

  • Manufacture, production, growth, or extraction of tangible personal property by the taxpayer in whole or in significant part in the U.S.
  • Production of qualified films
  • Production in the U.S. of electricity, natural gas, or portable water
  • U.S. real property construction
  • Performance in the U.S. of engineering or architectural services in connection with U.S. real property construction

The amount of the deduction for any tax year may not exceed the taxpayer’s taxable income or activities eligible for the deduction.  Now that the deduction is fully phased in, the deduction is designed to be economically equivalent to a 3% reduction in the tax rate on eligible activities conducted in the U.S.  The amount of the deduction is also limited to 50% of the taxpayer’s wages attributable to DPGR.  Consequently, businesses that are sole proprietorships or partnerships with no employees are not eligible for the deduction.