| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
THE WORKING FAMILIES TAX
RELIEF ACT OF 2004 extends the
alternative minimum tax exemption of
$58,000 (married filing jointly) and
$40,250 (single) through 2005. THE WFTRA PROVIDES A UNIFORM
DEFINITION OF qualified
child that applies for purposes of
head-of-household filing status, the
child care credit, the dependency
exemption and the earned income credit.
IN ELIMINATING THE
EXTRATERRITORIAL INCOME
exclusion for certain export receipts,
the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004
implements a new manufacturers
deduction. The deduction, phased in over
six years, essentially reduces the
maximum manufacturing income tax rate to
31.85% for domestic corporations.
THE AJCA OFFERS AN ITEMIZED
DEDUCTION for state sales tax to
individuals living in states that do not
levy a state income tax. The deduction
also is allowed for taxpayers in states
that do levy an income tax to the extent
of the greater of the state sales tax
amount or state and local income taxes
paid.
CPAs SHOULD ENCOURAGE CLIENTS
TO GIVE SPECIAL attention to the
extended increases in section 179
immediate expensing and accelerated cost
recovery allowances for leasehold
improvements.
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| RAYMOND A. ZIMMERMANN, PhD, and
PAT EASON, CPA, PhD, are associate
professors of accounting at the
University of Texas at El Paso. Their
e-mail addresses are rzimmer@utep.edu and peason@utep.edu. |
wo new tax laws have serious implications for
taxpayers and carry an assortment of effective
dates that will keep tax practitioners on their
toes. Intending to stimulate the economy and
create new jobs, Congress passed the Working
Families Tax Relief Act (WFTRA) and the American
Jobs Creation Act (AJCA) in 2004. This article
describes their major provisions and offers
planning tips to help CPAs get maximum advantage
for their clients and employers.
WORKING
FAMILIES TAX RELIEF ACT OF 2004
Known as the
Extender Act, WFTRA continues tax cuts from the
Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act
of 2001 (EGTRRA) and the Jobs and Growth Tax
Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 (JGTRRA). The
most important provisions are as follows:
| The
Cost of Tax Reform The estimated cost of the
Working Families Tax Relief Act of 2004
is $146 billion.
The American Jobs Creation
Acts $140 billion in temporary tax
cuts and offsetting revenue provisions
will have an overall zero cost effect on
the federal budget.
Source:
Joint Committee on Taxation, www.house.gov/jct/x-60-04.pdf and www.house.gov/jct/x-69-04.pdf.
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Tax
brackets. The WFTRA extends the
current 10% tax bracket for married filing
jointly (MFJ) and single taxpayers, the expanded
15% MFJ tax bracket and the MFJ standard
deduction designed to eliminate previously
existing marriage penalties. Bracket ranges for
both the 15% MFJ tax rate and the MFJ standard
deduction remain twice that allowed for single
taxpayers. Although they were originally
scheduled to expire beginning in 2005, these tax
breaks now continue through 2010.
Child tax credit. Originally
scheduled to revert to $700 in 2005, the child
tax credit now will remain at $1,000 through
2010; in 2011, it will revert to $500. The credit
is available only to taxpayers able to claim the
dependency exemption, so it is of particular
importance in the event of a divorce.
Planning tip. Accountants
advising clients on the tax implications of a
divorce should address in settlement negotiations
the issue of who will claim the dependency
exemption and child tax credit.
Alternative minimum
tax. EGTRRA and JGTRRA tax cuts
threatened to make many new taxpayers subject to
the alternative minimum tax (AMT). To address
this unintended pitfall, the AMT exemption was
raised to $58,000 (MFJ) and $40,250 (single) from
$49,000 (MFJ) and $35,750 (single) through 2004.
The WFTRA extends the increased exemption amounts
one year, through 2005, to allow Congress time to
reengineer the AMT system. In 2006 the AMT
exemption will revert to $45,000 (MFJ) and
$33,750 (single).
Planning tip. Examine
items that might affect the triggering of AMT in
2005 or 2006, such as deductions for local income
tax, sales tax and property tax; capital gains;
qualified dividends; accelerated depreciation;
and tax-exempt income. A taxpayer may want to
shift income and/or deductions between years
because of the higher AMT exemption in 2005.
Taxpayers not subject to AMT in 2005 may consider
paying property taxes during that year to prevent
a lower, albeit insufficient, exemption
amountresulting in AMTin 2006.
Uniform definition
of a child. The WFTRA defines a new
uniform standard for determining who is a
qualified child for purposes of
head-of-household filing status, the child care
credit, the dependency exemption and the earned
income credit. Essentially a three-pronged test,
it focuses on the age, residency and relationship
of the child to the taxpayer. Under the WFTRA, a
child is a person younger than 19 (24 for
full-time students). There is no age limit for
persons totally and permanently disabled. The
dependent care credit and the child tax credit
age limits remain unchanged at 13 (unless
disabled) and 17, respectively.
The relationship test under
WFTRA requires the child to be a son or daughter,
stepson or stepdaughter, brother or sister,
stepbrother or stepsister or descendent of the
taxpayer. Individuals adopted by the taxpayer
qualify, as well as anyone placed in the
taxpayers home as the result of a legal
proceeding. Foster children qualify if they live
with the taxpayer for the entire tax year.
The residency requirement also
has been relaxed. The child must live with the
taxpayer for more than half the year, except for
temporary and excused absences such as military
service, confinements due to illness, educational
efforts, business absences and vacations. This
uniform definition can be ignored when pre-WFTRA
criteria for a particular provision have been
met. However, the new test should make it easier
for accountants, as it provides fewer standards
with which to comply. Tiebreaker provisions also
have been enacted to address situations where a
child qualifies as a dependent for multiple
taxpayers under the new definition.
Miscellaneous
provisions. WFTRA provisions affect
many types of taxpayers. For individuals, the act
extends provisions relating to contributions to
Archer Medical Savings Accounts and the deduction
for educator expenses. With respect to the
refundable portion of the child tax credit and
the earned income credit, WFTRA also expands the
earned income definition to include combat pay.
Business provisions also have
been extended through 2005, including an enhanced
charitable deduction for post-2003/pre-2006
contributions of qualified computer technology by
C corporations to schools and libraries. The
deduction equals the donors basis plus
one-half of the ordinary income that would have
been realized had the property been sold, limited
to twice the donors basis. For example,
assume a computer manufacturer builds a computer
for $400 and sells it for $1,000. If the
manufacturer contributes the computer to a local
high school, it can take a deduction of
$700that is, $400 + 0.5 x
$600 (the manufacturers profit had the
computer been sold). If the basis had been $300,
the calculation would equal $650that is,
$300 + 0.5 x $700but the company could deduct
only $600, twice the $300 basis. In both
situations the deduction allowed is substantially
higher than the donors basis.
Finally, the WFTRA extends many
other credits, including welfare-to-work, work
opportunity, and research and development
credits. It repeals the phaseout for the 10%
credit for purchasers of hybrid automobiles or
qualified electric vehicles originally scheduled
for 2006, though it limits the credit to $2,000
through 2005 and only $500 in 2006.
Planning tips. CPAs
can make a number of suggestions to clients with
respect to the new WFTRA provisions.
Taxpayers considering the
purchase of a qualified electric vehicle should
consider doing so before yearend.
Examine clients
current tax withholdings. The act retroactively
extends many provisions that might not have been
accounted for in 2004 withholdings. If
clients taxes were overwithheld in 2004,
file a new W-4 to reduce amounts withheld for
2005. Take care to ensure taxpayers claim only
the appropriate number of exemptions.
Recommend that high-bracket
taxpayers gift appreciated assets (such as stock,
real estate, artwork and collectibles) to their
low-bracket children (over age 13). High-bracket
taxpayer capital gains are taxed at 15% vs. 5%
for low-bracket taxpayers.
Suggest that taxpayers
elect to have a sufficient amount of dividend
income taxed at the normal rate to allow any
offset against investment interest expense.
Qualified dividend income taxed at
15% does not qualify as investment income and
cannot be used to offset investment interest
expense.
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|
THE AMERICAN JOBS CREATION
ACT OF 2004
The AJCA directly
addresses the issue of export subsidies that were
ruled to be illegal by the World Trade
Organization and subject to sanctions by the
European Union. The act repeals the foreign sales
corporation/extraterritorial income system of
taxation and generally reduces tax rates for
domestic manufacturers. Additionally, it provides
special expensing and depreciation schedules for
small businesses, implements new S corporation
provisions, allows individuals a deduction for
state sales taxes paid, reforms international tax
provisions and provides tax breaks for farmers,
restaurant owners and manufacturers.
Manufacturers
deduction. A new
manufacturers deduction, to be phased in
over six years, essentially reduces the maximum
income tax rate for domestic manufacturing
corporations to 31.85%. It maxes out in 2010 at
9% of the lesser of the manufacturers
qualified production activities
income or taxable income for the year. What
constitutes a manufacturer or manufacturing
activities is broadly defined and unclear,
but appears to include activities such as
traditional manufacturing, construction,
architectural fees associated with construction,
engineering, energy production, filmmaking,
software design and agricultural production.
Accelerated
cost-recovery provisions. The AJCA
also addresses increased accelerated
cost-recovery provisions. Originally scheduled to
expire at the end of 2005, increased acquisition
limits ($410,000 in 2004) and overall immediate
expensing ceilings with annual inflation
adjustments ($102,000 in 2004) under IRC section
179 have been extended through 2007. The act also
shortens the statutory life for leasehold
improvements to nonresidential property and for
qualified restaurant property. Qualifying
expenditures on these types of properties placed
in service prior to 2006 are now subject to
straight-line depreciation over 15 years.
Planning tip. CPAs
should advise clients to consider accelerating
leasehold expenditures into 2005.
State sales tax
deduction. For the first time in
almost 20 years, a temporary provision for tax
years 2004 and 2005 offers an itemized deduction
for state sales tax to individuals living in
states that do not levy an income tax. In states
that do levy an income tax, taxpayers can deduct
the greater of the state sales tax amount or the
state and local income taxes paid.
Taxpayers can document the
sales tax paid through their receipts or use an
amount based on adjusted gross income in a sales
tax table published by the IRS. But CPAs should
review 2004 returns to ensure the new deduction
was taken to the extent allowable, especially if
taxpayers made large purchases during the year.
Planning tip. Given
the new state sales tax deduction allowance, CPAs
should advise taxpayers purchasing new vehicles
or other large items to keep track of all sales
tax receipts.
Charitable
donations. Beginning in 2005
charitable contributions of vehicles resulting in
deductions of more than $500 are limited to the
gross proceeds the charity receives from the sale
of the vehicle. The charitable organization must
provide the donor with a contemporaneous, written
acknowledgement of the donation.
The act also requires
corporations to obtain an appraisal for
charitable donations of property (other than
cash, publicly traded securities or inventory)
whose value exceeds $5,000. If the amount of the
contribution exceeds $500,000, the appraisal must
be attached to the corporations tax return
on which the deduction is claimed.
Other provisions. The
AJCA addresses major tax reform for multinational
businesses, excise taxes, tax shelters and
compensation plans. In the international area,
one provision reduces the number of income
baskets for foreign tax credits from nine to
twoone passive income basket and one
general one. New restrictions on nonqualified
deferred compensation plans now trigger immediate
taxation of previously deferred amounts. Beyond
the scope of this article, these AJCA components
place major restrictions and limitations on
taxpayers and require careful study by affected
parties.
Planning tips. The
new AJCA provisions create many opportunities for
CPAs to help taxpayers reduce tax liabilities.
| AICPA RESOURCES |
CPE
2004 Individual Tax Returns
Videocourse (DVD/text/manual, # 113600JA;
VHS/text/manual, # 113601JA). 2004 Tax Acts: Making Them
Work For You (# 732780JA).
AICPAs
Complete Tax Update for Individuals and
Sole Proprietors: Includes 2004 Tax Acts
(20042005 edition; # 731581JA).
AICPAs
Federal Tax Update by Biebl and
Ranweiler: Includes 2004 Tax Acts
(20042005 edition; # 731133JA).
For more information about any of the
above products or to order, go to www.cpa2biz.com
or call the Institute at 888-777-7077.
AICPA
Tax Membership Section
CPAs with tax practices
who want the tools, technologies and peer
interaction that lead to enhanced service
delivery can go to www.cpa2biz.com/ResourceCenters/Tax/AICPA+Tax+Section/MemTax.htm
for information on joining this section.
Members are kept up to date on tax
legislative and regulatory developments,
have access to technical resource panels
and content, receive free publications,
including Tax Practice Guides and
Checklists, and get a subscription
to The Tax Adviser at a reduced
price.
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The latitude regarding the terms manufacturer
and manufacturing activities will allow
many businesses that never qualified for benefits
under the foreign sales
corporation/extraterritorial income exclusion
provisions to qualify for the new
manufacturers deduction. However, CPAs
should take care in classifying taxpayer
activities under the new deduction. The roasting
of coffee beans qualifies as a production
activity, but a taxpayer that roasts beans and
then serves coffee made from them in the store is
engaged in both manufacturing and
nonmanufacturing activities. The taxpayer,
therefore, must separate manufacturing
activity receipts from those of other
activities that do not qualify in determining the
allowable deduction.
Taxpayers making
expenditures qualified under the extended
increased section 179 expensing ceilings should
elect expensing against properties with longer
depreciable lives to allow higher
acquisition-year depreciation rates to be
preserved for shorter statutory life properties
and to maximize total acquisition-year,
cost-recovery deductions. Also, while section 179
expensing has been extended to include computer
software, many software programs have useful
lives of less than one year. These properties are
currently deductible, and expensing them under
section 179 serves only to absorb already limited
statutory acquisition and deduction ceilings.
Section 179 expensing of
SUVs is now limited to $25,000 a year unless the
vehicle weighs more than 14,000 pounds.
S corporations now can have
up to 100 shareholders, and family members in a
six-generation range can be treated as one
shareholder. The provisions now allow taxpayers
to transfer losses from one former spouse to
another incident to a divorce. The rules also
permit suspended losses to be used by
beneficiaries of qualified subchapter S trusts.
Practitioners who represent small C corporations
may want to consider an S corporation option.
Lower long-term capital
gains tax rates make compensation planning
critical. Exercising incentive stock options on
shares held longer than one year may be more
attractive, but CPAs should caution clients to
take care to avoid triggering the AMT. Also,
section 83 elections against restricted stock may
be more beneficial as postelection long-term
stock appreciation will be taxed at lower
long-term capital gain rates.
Recommend that individuals
whose medical insurance plans have high
deductibles consider establishing medical savings
accounts (MSAs). Employee contributions to MSAs
are deductible in determining AGI, and employer
contributions are excluded from income. Unlike
medical flexible spending accounts (FSAs), MSAs
carry balances from one year to the next, and
unused amounts can be passed to surviving spouses
without any federal estate tax liability.
Taxpayers should examine funding in FSAs to avoid
forfeiture of any unused deposits.
The AJCA also imposed a new
limitation on taxpayers who sell their principal
residence. Normally up to $250,000 of gain for
single taxpayers ($500,000 for MFJ) who sell
their principal residence may be excluded from
income. Under this new restriction, any gain on a
home acquired in a like-kind exchange within five
years prior to the date of sale is not eligible
for the exclusion. Advise clients that the
five-year requirement must be met to qualify for
the exclusion.
PLANNING
AHEAD
While the Working
Families Tax Relief Act of 2004 and the American
Jobs Creation Act of 2004 provide significant
opportunities in tax planning, a maze of new
risks, effective dates, penalties and reporting
requirements require increased attention by CPAs
and taxpayers. This article highlights the more
common tax issues addressed in these acts; other,
more extensive, AJCA provisions in international,
tax shelter and compensation areas require a more
in-depth review. Tax professionals and taxpayers
must devote both time and resources to
understanding the impact and opportunities of the
new provisions. 
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