Tax planning

  • The Internal Revenue Service is putting together its next Taxpayer Advocacy Panel to make the tax administration system more customer-oriented, but it's already contending with a growing chorus of people who want to see major changes in the agency, if not outright dismantlement.

    March 18
  • RSM McGladrey and Axiom Solutions have signed an agreement to offer research and development tax credit services to companies.

    March 18
  • There are a lot of very good research tools on the market. But what's available for the small practitioner who needs less than high-powered products?

    March 18
  • The Internal Revenue Service said it would begin sending out more than 130 million economic stimulus payments in weekly installments starting May 2, with the distribution schedule based on the last two digits of the recipient's Social Security number.

    March 17
  • The Senate has confirmed Douglas H. Shulman as the new commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service.

    March 17
  • Sage Software has updated its Sage FAS software with a service update to reflect the economic stimulus package recently enacted by Congress.

    March 17
  • There are a lot of very good research tools on the market. But what's available for the small practitioner who needs less than high-powered products?

    March 17
  • The ink hadn’t dried on the new economic stimulus bill before federal tax authorities began receiving complaints about vicious new tax rebate scams targeting taxpayers and their accountants.The new flurry of fraudulent activity is directed at taxpayers expecting to receive the rebates of up to $1,200 per couple that Congress voted to send out after the close of this year’s tax filing season.

    March 16
  • By the time this column appears, CPAs everywhere are going to be tackling stacks of paperwork for income taxes. This will be true whether they are up to their necks in client returns, or struggling in an audit to reconcile book and tax income in Schedule M.With those pains in mind, it only makes sense that accountants would prefer GAAP accounting for income taxes to be relatively simple.

    March 16
  • The Government Accountability Office has issued a report on the Internal Revenue Service's performance so far this filing season, including a prediction that the IRS will lose hundreds of millions of dollars responding to calls about tax rebates.

    March 16
  • There are a lot of very good research tools on the market. But what's available for the small practitioner who needs less than high-powered products?

    March 16
  • The administration’s budget proposal to conform the penalty standards applicable to preparers and taxpayers has been welcomed by tax professionals concerned about possible conflicts of interest between preparers and their clients.The budget, the administration’s blueprint for legislative proposals, also calls for making permanent the 2001-2003 tax cuts, and offers measures to increase savings and investment and to improve compliance with the tax system. Rather than address Alternative Minimum Tax reform, it proposes a one-year patch to keep the number of taxpayers subject to the tax at around 4 million.

    March 16
  • While many Washington observers have called much of the tax revenue side of the Bush administration’s Fiscal Year 2009 budget proposals dead on arrival, this year’s “Blue Book” of Treasury explanations nevertheless remains an important tax-planning tool.It underscores what the Bush administration considers are problems remaining to be solved. As such, they are problems that need to be either addressed or “planned around” in the meantime. Here is our take on some of the highlights in making that determination.

    March 16
  • The Senate has voted to extend $340 billion worth of President Bush's tax cuts that were due to expire in 2010, but has rejected extensions of some other tax cuts.

    March 13
  • The Internal Revenue Service has issued a notice with procedures for vehicle manufacturers to certify that a fuel cell vehicle meets the requirements for a tax credit. It also provides guidance to taxpayers who purchase certified vehicles regarding what they must do to use the credit. Under the law, the new qualified fuel cell motor vehicle credit is available to purchasers of qualified vehicles. The amount of the new qualified fuel cell motor vehicle credit is based on the weight of the vehicle and on when the vehicle is placed in service. An additional credit may be available for a fuel cell passenger automobile or light truck based on a comparison of the city fuel economy rating of that vehicle with the 2002 model year city fuel economy of a vehicle in its weight class. For fuel cell vehicles that weigh not more than 8,500 pounds, the base credit amount is $8,000 if the vehicle is placed in service on or before Dec. 31, 2009. The base credit amount is reduced to $4,000 if the vehicle is placed in service after that date. The amount of the credit available for heavy vehicles varies from $10,000 to $40,000, depending on the weight of the vehicle. The purchaser may claim a credit for the certified amount for a fuel cell vehicle if it is placed in service by the taxpayer after Dec. 31, 2005, and is purchased on or before Dec. 31, 2014.

    March 13
  • The Internal Revenue Service has awarded roughly $9 million in matching grants to low income taxpayer clinics for the 2008 grant cycle, which runs from Jan. 1, 2008, through Dec. 31, 2008. LITCs are organizations independent from the IRS that provide low-income taxpayers with pro bono or nominal fee representation in federal tax controversies with the IRS. The clinics also provide tax education and outreach for taxpayers who speak English as a second language. IRS Publication 4134, Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic List, provides information on local clinics and contains details about the languages each clinic serves in addition to English. Through the LITC program, the IRS awards matching grants of up to $100,000 a year to qualifying organizations. For the 2008 grant cycle, the IRS awarded LITC grants to 154 organizations representing all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Guam.

    March 12
  • One quarter of all individual tax returns so far this filing season are being processed by the Internal Revenue Service's modernized account information computer system. The Customer Account Data Engine, or CADE, has processed 15.1 million individual tax returns through March 7, more than 25 percent of all those processed so far this year by the IRS. The number of tax returns processed this year by CADE has already topped the 11.2 million returns the system handled for all of last year. CADE, which is at the core of the effort to replace many of the agency's aging systems, dramatically speeds up internal IRS processing, permitting taxpayer accounts to update on a daily basis, rather than the older system's weekly basis. The IRS is rolling out CADE in a series of "releases," each improving on and adding to the system capabilities. The current release, launched in January, permits CADE to process certain 1040, 1040A and 1040EZ forms, as well as Schedules C, E and F for Form 1040 and a number of other IRS schedules, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit.

    March 12
  • The American Institute of CPAs sent a letter to the Senate Finance Committee prior to its March 12 hearing on estate tax reform urging lawmakers to make permanent changes to the estate tax prior to the current law expiring in 2010.In a letter, the institute reiterated a prioritized series of reforms -- a list that the AICPA had previously sent to Congress in 2005 and again in 2006.

    March 12
  • Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Committee on Finance, and Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, ranking member, have written to several religious ministries to urge cooperation with an earlier information request from Grassley. The ministry inquiry that Grassley launched last November is meant to gauge the effectiveness of certain tax-exempt policies. "This ought to clear up any misunderstanding about our interest and the committee's role," Grassley said. "We have an obligation to oversee how the tax laws are working for both tax-exempt organizations and taxpayers. Just like with reviews of other tax-exempt organizations in recent years, I look forward to the cooperation of these ministries in the weeks and months ahead." Grassley wrote to six ministries in November, asking a series of questions on the nonprofit organizations' expenses, treatment of donations and business practices. The questions were based on presentations of material from watchdog groups and whistleblowers and on investigative reports in local media outlets. One of the six ministries, Joyce Meyer Ministries of Fenton, Mo., has cooperated substantially with his request and provided the requested information. Benny Hinn Ministries of Grapevine, Texas, has indicated a willingness to cooperate and provided answers to five of the 28 questions so far. Representatives for Randy and Paula White of Without Walls International Church/Paula White Ministries, Tampa, Fla., have verbally indicated to Finance Committee staff that they would cooperate. The remaining ministries have not cooperated, citing privacy protections or questioning the committee's standing to request the information. Baucus and Grassley wrote to them on March 11 to describe the committee's jurisdiction and role in determining the effectiveness of tax policy developed by the committee, distinct from the Internal Revenue Service's role, which is to enforce existing law. The three ministries are: Kenneth and Gloria Copeland of Kenneth Copeland Ministries, Newark, Texas; Creflo and Taffi Dollar of World Changers Church International/Creflo Dollar Ministries, College Park, Ga.; and Eddie L. Long of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church/Eddie L. Long Ministries, Lithonia, Ga.

    March 12
  • Next year's budget proposals offered by Senate Democrats contain a material increase in spending that is contrary to sound fiscal policy, according to Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, ranking member of the Committee on Finance. In his opening statement on the Senate floor debate of the Fiscal Year 2009 Budget, Grassley noted that the proposals would raise discretionary spending by 9 percent over last year's spending. "How many Americans got a 9 percent raise? How many American families raised their discretionary household spending by 9 percent? You would think proponents of fiscal responsibility would be looking at spending cuts, not 9 percent increases," he said. The consequences are not merely imposed on high-income taxpayers, according to Grassley. "Low-income folks, including millions of seniors, pay no tax on their dividend or capital gain income," he said. "If this budget stands, even with the Baucus amendment, millions of these low-income taxpayers, especially seniors, will pay a 10 percent rate on capital gains and could pay as high as a 15 percent rate on dividends."

    March 11