Tax practice

  • The Taxpayer Advocacy Panel has sent the Internal Revenue Service recommendations for easing taxpayer burdens in five areas.

    August 24
  • The trio of private debt collection agencies the Internal Revenue Service selected for a pilot program will soon be able to come knocking.

    August 22
  • The Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service have issued proposed regulations clarifying the treatment of expenditures incurred in selling, acquiring, producing or improving tangible assets.

    August 21
  • IRS ISSUES SPRING '06 SOI BULLETIN: The Internal Revenue Service announced the release of its Spring 2006 issue of the Statistics of Income Bulletin. For the first time, the bulletin takes a detailed look at individual non-cash charitable contributions. The bulletin also includes information about high-income individual income tax returns for the 2003 tax year, S corporation returns for 2003, split-interest trusts for the 2004 filing year, controlled foreign corporations for the 2002 tax year, and the accumulation and distribution of IRAs for both the 2001 and 2002 tax years.For Tax Year 2003, individuals reported non-cash donations valued at $36.9 billion. Of these donations, corporate stock was the largest type, with 37.2 percent of the total value deducted. The average value of these stock donations was $79,279 per return. The largest number of donations reported was for clothing, representing 48 percent of all donations. Foundations were earmarked as the recipients of more than 30 percent of donations. Also, in the 2002 tax year, individual income taxpayers contributed approximately $42.3 billion to IRAs, representing an 18 percent increase over 2001 contributions. More than $204 billion flowed into IRAs during 2002 as rollovers, up from $187 billion in 2001 and most coming from employer-sponsored plans, such as 401(k) plans. Another $3.3 billion was converted from traditional IRAs into Roth IRAs.

    August 20
  • The National Taxpayer Advocate, the watchdog of the Internal Revenue Service, has singled out offers in compromise and refund anticipation loans for special focus in her menu of tax issues to address during the coming year.The "areas of emphasis" detailed in her mid-year report to Congress are critical to the IRS fulfilling its mission to U.S. taxpayers, according to NTA Nina Olson. Other areas she tagged for focus are:

    August 20
  • Warning: Tax strategies are now being carved out as private property, patented through the U.S. Patent Office.The practice started with a trickle in 1998, and is now becoming a steady stream threatening to overflow its banks. How does this development affect the tax practitioner? Will a practitioner be subject to a patent infringement suit for using a particular technique that has been "making the rounds?" Should practitioners begin applying for patents on strategies that they have discovered in solving a particularly thorny problem for a client?

    August 20
  • Here's hoping the little noticed one-day kick-off for tax reform, held by the Senate Finance Committee last month, amounts to more than window dressing in the struggle for meaningful tax reform and simplification.

    August 20
  • The Internal Revenue Service announced the beginning of an outreach campaign to the entertainment industry regarding the taxability of gift bags and promotional items. The effort follows an agreement the tax agency and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

    August 20
  • The U.S. Tax Court denied a petition from a West Virginian welder to deduct the cost of the Rocky Wolverine boots, as well as other clothes and gloves, which he said he purchased specifically for his work during the 2002 tax year.

    August 20
  • As part of the recently signed pension bill, the Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service will have to better define what constitutes "good" condition for donations of clothing or household items.

    August 20
  • The Internal Revenue Service has announced five director-level appointments in its Large and Mid-Size Business division, which serves corporations, subchapter S corporations and partnerships with assets greater than $10 million.

    August 16
  • According to a new budget survey, while growing revenues should allow U.S. states to increase their 2006 revenue surpluses by nearly 25 percent, to about $57 billion, that figure will shrink in the upcoming fiscal year -- which began for most states on July 1. The conference said that by year's end, the aggregate surplus would be reduced by nearly 30 percent, shrinking to about $40 billion -- much of that drop due to the uncertainty of tax collections.

    August 15
  • Cadence Design Systems Inc. said that it will protest the Internal Revenue Service's decision to seek $324 million in back taxes from the electronic design automation company.

    August 14
  • Spokespeople for Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, are already saying that his take on an estate tax reform bill could be next on Congress's docket.

    August 14
  • The chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, which oversees the Internal Revenue Service, has urged the agency to reconsider its contracts with Computer Sciences Corp.

    August 8
  • The Internal Revenue Service has again selected CCH to provide sales tax information for the 2006 filing period, providing the sales tax data for use by all taxpayers who file a 1040 return.

    August 8
  • Officials of the Canada Revenue Agency and the United States Internal Revenue Service announced progress in unraveling an abusive cross-border tax scheme.

    August 7
  • A Republican effort to pass a bill cutting taxes on estate inheritance, by piggybacking the measure on top of a minimum wage increase, failed on the eve of the Senate's four-week summer recess.

    August 6
  • IRS SAVES PAULSON FROM TAX HIT: The Internal Revenue Service will issue guidance clarifying the 20 percent penalty for executives who divest a deferred-compensation arrangement. The new regulations will translate into significant savings for incoming Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. Paulson will sell off the more than $470 million that he owns in Goldman Sachs stock to comply with conflict-of-interest provisions for his new position. The guidance says that any executive divesting a deferred-compensation arrangement specifically to comply with government rules on conflicts of interest doesn't have to pay the penalty. Paulson will still have to pay regular income taxes on the deferred compensation.A spokesperson for the Treasury said that the IRS had been working on the guidance for some time, but accelerated its work in time for Paulson to be covered. The writing of the new rule hadn't been a priority because so few people are affected under the provision.

    August 6
  • An estimated 15 million immigrants in the United States are not eligible to obtain a Social Security number. However, many of these same individuals pay taxes on income and are obligated to file tax returns.If this sounds confusing to you, then you're not alone.

    August 6