Progar & Company, P.A.
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Key developments during the second quarter of 2008 (MS Word)
Key developments during the second quarter of 2008 (.pdf)
Key developments during the second quarter of 2008
Dear Reader,
While the Farm and Military Acts were the most significant
developments in the second quarter of 2008, many other tax
developments may affect you, your family, and your livelihood. The
new law changes and other key developments are summarized below.
Please call us for more information about any of these developments
and what steps you should implement to take advantage of favorable
developments and to minimize the impact of those that are
unfavorable.
Farm Act.
Briefly stated, the Farm Act, which became law during the last
quarter, includes these key tax changes:
Thanks to a key change, there is no self-employment tax on
conservation reserve payments (government payments for conserving
and improving soil, water and wildlife resources) received by an
individual who is getting Social Security retirement or disability
payments.
The favorable tax treatment for qualified conservation contributions
(certain transfers of qualified real property interests to qualified
organizations exclusively for conservation purposes) is extended
through 2009.
There's a new deduction for farmers' endangered species recovery
expenses.
There's a one-year cut in the tax rate for a corporation's qualified
timber gain.
There's a new credit for cellulosic biofuels, plus a new credit for
agricultural chemicals security expenses.
All racehorses placed in service after 2008 and before 2014 are
classified as three-year property for depreciation purposes,
regardless of their age.
Victims of the 2007 Kansas tornado disaster get a host of tax breaks
similar to the tax breaks created for the victims of the 2005 Gulf
area hurricanes.
There's a new limitation on the amount of farming losses that non-C
corporation taxpayers may deduct currently.
Changes to the farm optional method and nonfarm optional method for
computing net earnings from self-employment for post-2007 tax years
allow electing taxpayers to pay more in optional self-employment
taxes to gain more Social Security benefits.
The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) is required to report the
amount of market gain a farmer realizes when he or she repays a CCC
market assistance loan.
Please contact us for when changes apply, as many of the changes
have complex effective dates.
Military Act.
In a nutshell, the Military Act, which also became law during the
last quarter, includes these key changes:
Rebate checks under the Stimulus Act go to those in the active
military who file jointly even if one spouse does not have a Social
Security number.
The earned income credit for combat pay is revived and made
permanent.
The rule allowing reservists who are called up to make penalty-free
premature withdrawals from company retirement plans or IRAs has been
made permanent.
Special bond rules to help qualified veterans obtain mortgage
financing are permanently extended.
Survivors of military personnel may gain additional retirement
benefits under revised rules.
The tax treatment for recipients of differential pay (an employer's
voluntary payment of compensation that service members would
otherwise been paid during active duty) is revised, and a new tax
credit is created for small employers who pay it.
The deadline for filing tax refund credit claims arising from
Department of Veterans Affairs disability determinations has been
extended.
The rule allowing active duty reservists to make penalty-free
withdrawals from retirement plans has been made permanent.
A new rule allows a military death gratuity or amount received under
the Service members' Group Life Insurance (SGLI) program to be
rolled over to a Roth IRA or Coverdell education savings account.
The homesale exclusion rules have been liberalized for Peace Corps
volunteers and employees of the intelligence community.
Members of the reserves who are called to active duty may withdraw
unused amounts held in a health flexible spending account (health
FSA).
The tax rules for those who expatriate have been toughened
significantly.
Please contact us for when changes apply, as many of the changes
have complex effective dates.
Genetic discrimination.
A new law has been enacted to bar discrimination in health insurance
and employment on the basis of an individual's genetic information,
beginning in May 2009.
Stimulus payments.
Based on an individual's direct deposit designation on his or her
2007 return, the special economic stimulus payment may have been
direct deposited by the IRS into a tax-favored account, such as an
IRA, a health savings account (HSA), an Archer medical savings
account (MSA), a Coverdell education savings account (CESA), or a
qualified tuition program account (QTP or IRC §529 program). A
taxpayer who took advantage of this feature may discover that he or
she needs the stimulus payment in cash. The IRS has advised
taxpayers that they may withdraw from a tax-favored account an
amount not exceeding the amount of the economic stimulus payment
directly deposited into that account, notwithstanding any tax law
restrictions. If withdrawals are made no later than the time for
filing the taxpayer's income tax return for 2008, plus extensions
(or in the case of a CESA, the later of May 31, 2009, or the time
for filing the taxpayer's income tax return for 2008, plus
extensions), the amount withdrawn will be treated as neither
contributed to nor distributed from the tax-favored account. Thus,
the withdrawal won't be subject to regular federal income tax or to
any additional tax or penalty tax.
Boosted standard mileage rate for second half of 2008.
The standard mileage allowance for owned or leased autos (including
vans, pickups or panel trucks) has been increased 8¢ from 50.5¢ to
58.5¢ per business mile for travel from July 1, 2008 to Dec. 31,
2008 to better reflect the real cost of operating an auto in this
period of rapidly rising gas prices. The rate can also be used by
employers to reimburse tax-free under an accountable plan employees
who supply their own autos for business use. Additionally, an
employee's personal use of lower-priced company vehicles during 2008
may be valued at 58.5¢ per mile if certain conditions are met. The
rate for using a car to get medical care or in connection with a
move that qualifies for the moving expense has also increased 8¢ for
the last half of 2008 from 19¢ to 27¢ per mile.
Health saving accounts (HSAs).
There have been several important developments relating to HSAs:
(1) The IRS issued final regulations providing guidance on
miscellaneous HSA comparability requirements. HSAs aren't subject to
nondiscrimination rules restricting the amount of benefits provided
to highly compensated employees. Instead, if an employer decides to
fund HSAs, it must make “comparable” contributions to all comparable
participating employees' HSAs. The guidance addresses situations
where an employee has not established an HSA by Dec. 31 of a year
and where an employer accelerates contributions for the calendar
year for employees who have incurred qualified medical expenses.
(2) The IRS released the annual inflation-adjusted contribution,
deductible, and out-of-pocket expense limits for 2009.
(3) The IRS issued detailed guidance on changes to the HSA rules
made by the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006. For example, the
guidance explains that the maximum annual contribution to an HSA is
the sum of the contribution limits determined separately for each
month, based on eligibility and health plan coverage on the first
day of the month. Under the “full contribution” rule, a taxpayer who
is an eligible individual during the last month of a tax year is
treated as having been an eligible individual during every month
during the tax year for purposes of computing the annual HSA
contribution. The guidance explains that the full contribution rule
can increase, but not decrease, the contribution limit for an
individual.
(4) The IRS provided guidance on a qualified HSA funding
distribution from an individual's Individual Retirement Account
(IRA) or Roth IRA to a Health Savings Account (HSA). Enacted as part
of the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, the qualified HSA
funding distribution is a one-time transfer from an individual's IRA
to his or her HSA. It is generally excluded from gross income and
not subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty.
Mortgage debt forgiveness. The IRS released an updated version of IRS Publication 4681, Canceled Debts, Foreclosures, Repossessions and Abandonments. It explains the rules that currently apply for canceled debt on a principal residence. In general, a taxpayer realizes income when debt is forgiven. There are several exceptions and exclusions that may result in all or part of a taxpayer's income from the cancellation of debt being nontaxable. For example, the Mortgage Relief Act, effective for indebtedness discharged on or after Jan. 1, 2007 and before Jan. 1, 2010, generally allows taxpayers to exclude up to $2 million of mortgage debt forgiveness on their principal residence. The exclusion is claimed by filling out Form 982, Reduction of Tax Attributes Due to Discharge of Indebtedness (and Section 1082 Basis Adjustment), and attaching it to the taxpayer's applicable income tax return. The new IRS publication also explains the tax treatment of foreclosures and abandonments of residences.
Lewes CPA
office