Module 5: Essentials of Business Entity Taxation Flashcards
What is the cash accounting method?
When a taxpayer generally reports income when cash is collected (or constructive receipt income tax doctrine applies), and expenses when any cash payment is made. Used by taxpayers whose annual average gross receipts do not exceed $27 million for the three prior tax years.
Who may use the cash method of accounting?
Individuals, sole proprietorships, partnerships that don’t have C corps as partners and whose average annual gross receipts for any three-year preceding period do not exceed $27m, C corps with the $27mm rule, and qualified personal service corporations.
What is the accrual method of accounting?
The conceptual opposite of the cash method, and requires recognition of taxable income in the same tax year it is reported on the taxpayer’s financial statements, and for expenses to be reported as they are incurred.
For whom is the accrual method mandatory?
For any business that maintains inventory, unless the average annual gross receipts are $27 million or less.
What is the hybrid method? Can you give me an example?
Taxpayers may account for some items of income using the accrual method and others with the cash method. example would be an automobile dealership, where the accural method would report income from car sales and the cash method would be used to recognize income from service-related transactions involving car repairs and maintenance.
What is the stipulation for changing accounting method?
Must have IRS approval.
What is specific identification?
The specific identification method requires the owner to keep track of the cost of each item in inventory, and is only feasible in small businesses that have a relatively small number of relatively high-value items in inventory (e.g., art gallery or car dealer).
What is the difference between a fiscal year and a calendar year? What is the requirement to change it?
A fiscal year is a 12-month period that ends on the last day of any month other than December. Must have IRS approval to change it.
What does NOL stand for and who can claim it?
Net Operations Loss - available to self-employed individuals, regular corporations, and estate and trust entities. Not allowed for partnerships or S corporations.
For how long can NOL be carried forward?
Indefinitely.
WhaFt is the limit of the loss of an NOL?
80% of the total taxable income reported for the carryforward years.
What is a C corp?
A person (entity) separate from its shareholders/owners for income tax purposes.
How are the earnings from a C corp taxed?
They are taxed to the corporation at special corproate income tax rates.
What is the major disadvantage of the corporate form?
The double taxation of profits. The corporation is taxed on income and pays dividends from after-tax income to shareholders, who are then taxed on the dividend.
What is the major advantage of the corporate form?
The limited liability accorded to the shareholders for corporate obligations.
What is the dividends-received deduction?
A special that allows a corporation to deduct dividends received from another company. If the receiving corporation owns less than 20% of the distributing corporation, then it may deduct 50% of the dividends. It it owns 20% or more, it may deduct 65% of the dividends.
What is the objective of the accumulated earning tax?
To coerce the regular corporation into paying dividends to its shareholders.
When does the accumulated earning tax apply?
When a corporation accumulated earnings beyond its reasonable business needs.
What is the accumulated earnings credit?
$250k for non PSCs (personal service corporations, and $150k for PSCs.
What are the fields that qualify to be a PSC?
HALE: health, accounting, law, and engineering (and consulting).
What are the 2 stipulations for being a PSC?
1: Substantially all of the activities perform one of the services in the approved fields (health, accounting, law, engineering).
2: At least 95% of the stock by value must be owned by employees performing the services.
What is the objective of the personal holding company tax?
To discourage closely held corporate owners from using the separate corporate entity as an investment shell.
What are the two tests for the PHC?
An ownership test- more than 50% of stock is owned by five or fewer individuals.
Passive income test - at least 60% of the corporations adjusted ordinary income comes from securities and other income-producing property.
How much is the PHC tax?
20% flat rate of the undistributed personal holding company income (income produced from securities and other income-producing property).
What are the stipulations for Section 1244 stock?
Capital contributions to the company cannot exceed $1mm at the time of forming, and stock must be exchanged for investor money, and not services.
What is special about Section 1244 Stock?
Sale of the stock at a loss is treated as an ordinary loss, and may be deducted against ordinary income, reducing the individual’s tax liability.
What is the maximum amount of loss that can be deducted as an ordinary loss Section 1244 stock?
$50k for single taxpayers, $100k if married.
What is special about Section 1202 Stock?
Taxpayers other than C corporations that hold qualified small business stock for more than five years may exclude a portion of the gain on the sale of the stock.
What is the maximum of the gain eligible for the exclusion for Section 1202 Stock?
The greater of 10 times the taxpayer’s basis or $10 million of gain from the stock in that corporation.