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Highlights
INSTITUTE
CALLS FOR FEWER LIMITS ON S CORPORATIONS
A bill pending in the
House of Representatives would modernize the laws that
govern subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code, Robert
A. Zarzar, CPA and chairman of the AICPA tax executive
committee, told the House Ways and Means subcommittee on
select revenue measures in June. The Small Business Job
Protection Act of 1996 and other laws passed in recent
years have facilitated entrepreneurs access to S
corporations, he said, but more liberal reform is
necessary to broaden and ease entry into these entities,
which offer a limited number of investorscurrently
not more than 75protection from corporate
creditors, the ability to deduct business losses on
shareholders individual tax returns and freedom
from double taxation.
Zarzar told subcommittee members that
while the Institute had some minor reservations about a
few provisions in the bill, the AICPA generally supported
HR 1896, the Subchapter S Modernization Act of 2003,
which addresses many, but not all, of the improvements
needed. Still, the AICPA recommends certain changes in
the bill, including
Recognizing and
removing anticompetitive limitations on the growth of
existing S corporations. The Institute
strongly supports section 205 of the pending bill
allowing a stock basis increase for appreciated property
an S corporation contributes to charity. Currently, the
IRS requires an S corporation shareholder to reduce his
or her stock basis by the amount of any charitable
contribution deduction flowing from an S corporation to
the shareholder. So if an S corporation claims a
fair-market-value deduction for a contribution of
appreciated property, the shareholder must reduce his or
her basis in the S corporation by that amount. But for
partnerships, the IRS requires a partners basis in
his or her partnership interest be reduced by his or her
pro rata share of the partnerships basis in the
property contributed. The AICPA believes partnerships and
S corporations should be treated similarly in this
context, and this provision would preserve the intended
benefit of a fair-market-value deduction for the
contributed appreciated property without recognizing the
appreciation when the stock is later sold. Section 205
would encourage charitable giving and protect taxpayers
who dont realize gifting appreciated property
through an S corporation results in recognition of the
gain inherent in the property when the S corporation
stock eventually is disposed of in a taxable transaction.
Clarifying or
correcting existing S-corporation-related laws. The
pending bill eliminates a major concern regarding the use
of electing small business trusts
(ESBTs) for succession planning in
family-owned S corporations by disregarding unexercised
powers of appointment in determining the trusts
eligibility as an S corporation shareholder. However,
because ESBTs are taxed at the highest marginal rate
(that is, 35%) and thus are minimally susceptible to
abuse, the Institute believes the bill should go further
and eliminate most other eligibility restrictions on
ESBTs.
AcSEC
EDs FOCUS ON NVESTMENT ENTITY FINANCIAL REPORTING
The AICPA Accounting
Standards Executive Committee (AcSEC) issued two exposure
draft statements of position (SOP) in July. One, Financial
Highlights of Separate Accounts: An Amendment to the
Audit and Accounting GuideAudits of Investment
Companies, provides guidance on reporting financial
highlights by separate accounts of insurance enterprises.
The other is titled Reporting Financial Highlights
and Schedule of Investments by Nonregistered Investment
Partnerships: An Amendment to the Audit and Accounting
GuideAudits of Investment Companies and SOP 95-2,
Financial Reporting by Nonpublic Investment Partnerships.
Comments on both, which are available at www.aicpa.org/members/div/acctstd/edo/index.htm,
are due September 15.
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