Business Taxes

Watching Out for the Cliff

Ordinarily, I use these posts to discuss fun items related to taxes and finances. I know that you can read the usual boring articles about the usual boring tax topics pretty much anywhere else. And most of you are happy to let me worry about "the details."

Every so often, though, I need to discuss more serious issues, even if it's just to let you know that I’m on top of them. That's the case today with the so-called "fiscal cliff" -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's clever term for what happens on January 1, when a bunch of current tax rules expire, and some new rules take effect. Here's a quick rundown of what to expect:

  • The Bush tax cuts expire. That means the top rates on ordinary income goes from 35% to 39.6%; the top rate on capital gains goes from 15% to 20%; and the top rate on qualified dividends jumps from 15% to 39.6%. Much of the debate over tax rates focuses on

Duh!

Today's wired world has most of us drowning in information. Twenty-four-hour cable news networks, instantaneous online updates, Facebook, and Twitter are constantly assaulting our senses. Much of what passes for "news" is really just noise — the latest statistical fluctuations in the presidential polls, for example, or the comings and goings of your favorite Kardashian sister. But every so often, we learn something so surprising that it rocks us to the core and causes us to re-evaluate everything we thought we knew.

Three professors have just revealed that sort of earth-shattering information in the newest issue of Accounting Review. They analyzed data from 5,000 corporations over 17 years from 1992-2008 to answer an age-old question: "Do IRS Audits Deter Corporate Tax Avoidance?" And here's their startling conclusion -- make sure you're sitting down to read it: when audit rates go up, so do taxes!

Department of Worst Nightmares

Last week, I wrote about a recent report issued by the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration ("TIGTA") -- an independent board that works to prevent and detect fraud, waste, and abuse within the IRS and related entities. I was amused to learn that 70 federal agencies owed $14 million in unpaid employment taxes on their employees' wages -- and 18 more agencies hadn't even filed their employment tax returns. But I was more surprised to learn that the IRS can't take any effective action to collect those outstanding balances.

While I was busy bringing you the news about Uncle Sam's "Get Out of Jail Free" card, the TIGTA was busy issuing another report that I knew you'd

Trillion-Dollar Taxpayer

When America's biggest corporations make news for their taxes, it's usually for how little they pay. One recent study, for example, argues that 26 big corporations, including AT&T, Boeing, and Citigroup, paid their CEOs more than they paid Uncle Sam in federal income tax. (Comparisons like that might bring to mind an old Babe Ruth quote. In 1930, a reporter pointed out that Ruth's $80,000 salary was more than the President's — to which the Babe replied "I know, but I had a better year . . .") Now, another corporate giant is making headlines for its taxes. And for once, the surprising news involves how much it paid, not how little.

Exxon and Mobil are iconic corporate names. Both began life as parts of John D. Rockefeller's original Standard Oil Company. Both were spun off in 1911 when the U.S. Supreme Court found Standard Oil guilty of illegally monopolizing the oil refining industry. ("Standard Oil Company of New Jersey" eventually grew into Exxon, while "Standard Oil Company of New York" morphed into Mobil.) When the two giants

Less Rich. Less Famous. Less Tax.

Last week, we brought you a story from those party animals at the IRS Statistics of Income Division about an annual report on the 400 highest incomes in America. It turns out they're a very successful bunch — for 2009, they earned an average of $202.4 million and paid an average of $40.9 million in tax. This week, we're going to talk about a different group of taxpayers. Less rich, less famous, but maybe more successful in their own way.

Back in 1969, Treasury Secretary Joseph Barr was shocked to discover that 155 Americans had earned over $200,000 that year, yet paid nothing in tax. Zip. Zilch. Nada. ($200,000 isn't bad money now — back then, it had about the same buying power as $1.2 million today.) Washington huffed and puffed, then passed the "Alternative Minimum Tax," or AMT. In 1970, the new tax surprised 18,464 unhappy taxpayers. No one could have foreseen it growing into a complete "parallel" tax system, a many-headed Hydra that millions every year.

Fast-forward to today. With the AMT firmly in place, the IRS has just released a 61-page report revealing that in 2009, 20,752 taxpayers earned over $200,000 and paid — you guessed it — zero tax.

Report Card Time

Memorial Day has come and gone, and the school year is quickly winding down, if it isn't already over. Kids are getting excited for summer vacation, and there's just one hurdle left — the dreaded report card. (If your kids are getting nervous and antsy around mail time, you might want to pay attention!)

Kids in school aren't the only ones who have to sweat report-card time. That's right, the IRS gets a report-card time, too. In fact, they get two. By law, National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson has to submit two reports to Congress each year: the "Objectives Report," which outlines goals and activities planned for the coming year, and the "Annual Report," which summarizes the 20 most serious problems encountered by taxpayers, recommendations for solving those problems, and other IRS efforts to improve "customer" service and reduce taxpayer burden.