Tax planning

  • An estimated 15 million immigrants in the United States are not eligible to obtain a Social Security number. However, many of these same individuals pay taxes on income and are obligated to file tax returns.If this sounds confusing to you, then you're not alone.

    August 6
  • Individuals who participate in online sales at auction sites such as eBay face a plethora of bookkeeping and tax issues regarding their entrepreneurial ventures. Some people choose to ignore the issues and simply not report their financial activity.Earlier this spring, the IRS completed a National Research Program study in which it was determined that an annual tax gap of more than $300 billion exists. The tax gap represents the difference between the amount of tax that should be paid and the amount actually paid in any given year.

    August 6
  • The American Institute of CPAs praised a new law that will prevent states from taxing the retirement income of non-resident partners last week.

    August 6
  • One of the provisions inserted by the Conference Committee into the Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005, signed by President Bush on May 17, 2006, was a tax increase on citizens working abroad. The provision was not in either the House or Senate versions of the legislation, although Congress has considered a number of proposals related to the taxation of citizens working abroad over the years, including some Senate bills in the current Congress.It is estimated that over 4 million citizens work abroad. The U.S. Census does not count them, so we have no accurate numbers. The Treasury does try to tax them, but with questionable effectiveness. For the 1999 tax year, out of 127,667,890 returns filed, 1,350,890 had foreign addresses, but this included the APO and FPO addresses of members of the armed forces, as well as some Puerto Rico residents with offshore income. A 2004 Internal Revenue Service study reported that in 2001, fewer than 300,000 tax returns reported foreign-source-earned income.

    August 6
  • Maintaining that there's near-universal agreement that the nation's tax code is too complex, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, officially opened the committee's hearings titled "Kick-off for Tax Reform: Tackling the Tax Code."

    August 3
  • Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Mark W. Everson has been elected chairman of the Forum on Tax Administration, a panel of national tax administrators that is part of the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

    August 1
  • A Senate report estimates that tax cheating now equals about 7 cents out of each dollar paid by honest taxpayers, or as much as $70 billion annually.

    August 1
  • The American Institute of CPAs has been working to mend fences with local officials in Durham, N.C., after the county manager threatened to pull a $400,000 subsidy package for the institute's relocation of its New Jersey headquarters.

    July 31
  • Before adjourning for a five-week summer recess, the House pushed through a bill pairing a minimum wage increase with a GOP-led effort to extend cuts on estate taxes.

    July 31
  • The Internal Revenue Service released formal guidance on its new tip reporting procedure, the Attributed Tip Income Program.

    July 30
  • The Boeing Co. won't look to take a tax deduction on a $615 million settlement it paid to settle federal ethics charges.

    July 27
  • The success of the Internal Revenue Service's e-filing program has led to the elimination of several jobs, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported this week.

    July 27
  • Over 90 tax professors have joined the tax sections of the American Bar Association and the New York State Bar Association in asking a senator to drop his attempt to block the confirmation of Eric Solomon for assistant Treasury secretary for Tax Policy.

    July 26
  • A new report from the Treasury provides a detailed analysis of what effects proposals to permanently extend the tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 might have on the country's economy.

    July 26
  • States and cities could lose billions annually under a congressional bill that would require businesses to have employed at least one employee in a state for 21 days, or have leased or bought property, before having to pay the state's business taxes.

    July 25
  • Former California gubernatorial candidate George "Nick" Jesson has pleaded guilty to state tax evasion charges and will begin serving a 27-month term in prison concurrently with his sentence for federal tax evasion charges.

    July 25
  • Australia's Tax Office is investigating Paul Hogan, star of the "Crocodile Dundee" films, on suspicion of funneling millions in royalties from his films into illegal tax havens.

    July 25
  • Reading about former California gubernatorial candidate George "Nick" Jesson, who recently finished pleading guilty to state and federal tax evasion charges, reminded me of conversation I'd had with a friend a couple of weeks back.

    July 25
  • Reality television victor Richard Hatch has been sent to an Oklahoma federal prison to serve a 51-month sentence for failing to pay taxes on the more than $1 million he took away from the first season of CBS's "Survivor."

    July 24
  • While most taxpayers and their accountants complain about the increasingly complex Tax Code, some of the nation's biggest corporations welcome complexity as an opportunity to "game the system."At least that's the latest grumbling from Capitol Hill, where members of the Senate Finance Committee are voicing fresh concerns over the widening "corporate tax gap."

    July 23