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| Reducing an employers
withholding and employment tax liability. |
From The Tax Adviser:
When
Is a Wage Not a Wage?
ot all payments to employees from employers
are wages. If remuneration is not wages, an employer may
be able to withhold less income tax, pay reduced
employment taxes and accrue fewer retirement benefits.
Thus, it is important for CPAs to understand the
situations in which payments to workers may not be wages
and such payments effect on these obligations and
benefits.
DEFINING
THE ISSUE
Generally, wages are
treated similarly for purposes of income tax withholding
and employment tax obligations. IRC sections 3121(a) and
3306(b) broadly define wages for employment tax purposes
as all remuneration for employment. The
definition under IRC section 3401(a) is essentially
identical for income-tax-withholding purposes. The
question is: Which payments fall outside the definition
of wages? If payments are not wages, the employer incurs
no legal obligation to withhold or pay employment taxes.
IS
IT WAGES?
For payments to be wages,
they must be remuneration for services the employee
provided to his or her employer and therefore subject to
FICA (for example, Social Security and Medicare) taxes.
What remuneration for services is actually called and the
basis on which it is paid are immaterial to
classification as wages. Further, the employment
relationship need not exist at the time it is paid.
CATEGORIZING
PAYMENTS
The following are examples
of the types of payments that may or may not be wages:
payments made to involuntarily dismissed employees,
settlements involving more than a single claim for
damages, claims released in a termination agreement,
attorneys fees and reimbursements of employee
business expenses.
WITHHOLDING
OBLIGATION
Relief from the
employers secondary obligation to withhold taxes on
wages may occur even though an employer remains liable
under its primary obligation to pay employment taxes. An
employers withholding obligation may be reduced
based on a reasonable expectation that no obligation to
withhold existed or on the employers lack of
adequate notice of his or her duty to withhold. The focus
is on whether the expense was ordinary and necessary to
the employers business rather than whether it was
deductible by the employee.
RETIREMENT
BENEFITS
If a qualified defined
benefit or defined contribution plan defines compensation
using the safe harbors in regulations section
1.415-2(d)(11)(i), compensation will equal the wages used
for employment tax purposes. Severance pay classified as
wages for employment tax purposes will require a
corresponding increase in funding for retirement plan
benefits.
CONCLUSION
If payments are not wages,
the employers obligations to withhold, pay
employment taxes and accrue retirement benefits are
reduced. Given these potential liabilities, CPAs helping
clients plan in this area should know how to determine
whether payments are wages.
For more information see the article,
Is It Wages? by Nancy Stara, in the March
2003 issue of The Tax Adviser.
Lesli Laffie,
editor
The Tax Adviser
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