‘income tax’ Tagged Posts

Arizona State Tax Return – rental loss?

I have 00 loss in rental (schedule E) claimed in federal return. Now I am filing the Arizona State Tax return. I am not sure if this loss can be claim...

 

I have 00 loss in rental (schedule E) claimed in federal return. Now I am filing the Arizona State Tax return. I am not sure if this loss can be claimed in the state tax return. I found this in the instruction as attached, but I don’t understand it quite well. Does any one know? Thank you

"Arizona does not have specific net operating loss provisions for individual taxpayers. Arizona conforms to the federal net operating loss provisions, including the carryback provisions.
As an Arizona nonresident, you may have had a loss from prior year Arizona business operations. However, the loss cannot offset this year’s income unless the loss is a net operating loss for federal purposes. You can include the loss deduction in your Arizona gross income only to the extent included in your federal adjusted gross income. You cannot include any amount of that net operating loss that has already been deducted for Arizona purposes.
Enter the amount of net operating loss deduction included in your federal adjusted gross income that was derived from Arizona sources. Do not include any amount of the loss that has already been deducted for Arizona purposes.
For information on deducting a net operating loss carryback, see Arizona Department of Revenue Income Tax Procedure ITP 99-1".

Taxes for Clueless Independent Contractor?

 

I have been working as an Independent Contractor for my employer as of 9/11/08. I didn’t have a paycheck by the 9/15 so I will be paying my income from 9/11 on by the 01/15/09 quarterly pay date for small businesses. By the end of the year I will have earned about ,400 from this job. The only deduction I have is about for transportation.

I also held another job earlier in the year from which I earned about 0. Social Security and Medicare were witheld, but not income tax. Altogether I will have earned under the ,200 limit for the entire year of 2008.

What I am unsure of is if I still need to pay income tax. My quarterly earnings are such that I would have earned a taxable amount had I earned that much every quarter, so I am confused about that.

Also, how much of the 15.3% SS&M do I need to pay? I’ve seen literature talking about how half of Social Security and Medicare is usually paid by employers, half of it can be deducted from net earnings…it’s all very very confusing to me.

If anyone can give me an answer, or clarify this that’d be great. I’m not in the market for consultants (I already know some.)

Need Math Homework help please?? I would really appreciate it.?

 

4) You worked from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p. m. on Tuesday.
You worked from 8:00 a. m. to 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday.
How many hours have you worked?

5) Your annual salary is ,500.00. What is your monthly salary?

6) Your weekly salary is 0.00 plus 8% of your total sales of ,275.00. Calculate your weekly salary.

7) 65% of 800 is what amount ?

8) 75 % of what number is .00?

9) What percentage of 0.00 is 6.00 ?

10) Change 15% to a decimal.

11) Your employer withholds 25% of your salary (for income tax, social security, medicare). Your weekly salary is 0.00 . What will be withheld by your employer ?

12) You make ,500.00 . Your state tax rate is 1 ½ % . You have two allowances ( exemptions ) . Each allowance is ,300.00 . How much do you owe ?

13) Your gross weekly pay is 0.00 . Your Medicare rate is 1.45 %. What is your Medicare deduction ?

14) Your employer takes 8.65 % of your check for Social Security and Medicare .
You make ,800.00 gross pay. What does your employer take or deduct ?

15) The annual healthcare cost for each employee is ,900.00 .
Your employer pays 80% . What do you pay ?

16) The annual healthcare cost for each employee is ,800.00 .
You pay 50% of this and get paid monthly . What is deducted from your paycheck each month?

17) Find the average of the following numbers.
,500.00 ,500.00 ,500.00
,500.00 ,500.00

19) The average of your last five years is ,500.00 . Your pension is 60% of this average.
What is your pension?

20.)Find the total monthly expenses
Monthly living = 5.00
Monthly fixed = ,278.00
Annual Expenses = ,400.00

21) You have made a purchase of .75 .
The state sales tax is 7% and the county tax is 1.25% .
The total tax is ______ and the total purchase price is _______.

22) You have purchased three pounds of hamburger for .97 .
The unit price is_______.

23) Which is the better buy ?
A 20 oz. Bag of chips for .00 or
a 10 oz. Bag for .50 .

24) A purse has a price tag of .99 . It is on sale at a 25% discount .
What is the sales price ?

25) Your business buys a product for 0.00 . Your business model tells you to mark up your product 33% . How much is the markup ?

“honest, hardworking people” vs. simple math?

 

i feels like everywhere i go i hear people complaining loudly about hardworking people being "punished" for making money.
i assume they’re referring to the fact that the more money you make, the greater a percentage you have to pay in income tax.

so, for example, Randy, a writer, makes ,000 a year and Brett, a business manager, makes 0,000. Randy has to pay about 25% of his income, while Brett has to pay about 33%. therefore, Brett is getting ripped off, right?

that’s the part that baffles me. after deductions are made, Randy has ,000 and Brett has 3,333. Randy can barely afford to support his wife and child. meanwhile, Brett opens up his Apple Pro laptop and posts a rant on Yahoo Answers titled "why do Dems want to take my money?"

maybe you believe that the more money you make, the harder of a worker you are. maybe you don’t. i don’t want assume Brett is greedy, but he is clearly not satisfied with the money he gets to keep. his next tax jump (from 33% to 35%) doesn’t occur until his salary reaches 7,700. how is that a lack of incentive?

and how is Brett a decent, hardworking american if he grumbles and complains about giving up the money that would go into a pool or a summer house in italy?

Are higher taxes bad for the businesses?

 

I keep reading these comments here that claim that Obama will raise taxes on corporations, which will cause companies to shut down, and people to get laid off etc..

So here is a little information from someone who is quasi-literate in such affairs. First of all Obama is not talking about raising corporate taxes, which are very different from income tax. Obama wants to raise income tax (not corporate tax or capital gains tax) on families that make more than 250 thousand dollars a year. So your boss, who probably makes more than that, would want to get paid a little more so he can offset the higher tax that he would have to pay. The increase will come from the PRE-TAX profit of the company that you are working for. More a company pays in salaries the less it pays in tax as the salary, being an expense, is tax deductable. So in other words that tax that would otherwise be paid by the company is now paid by the individual (your boss). So why the whole drama? The answer is actually simple. Corporations have found a lot of loop holes in tax laws and they never pay the taxes that they are supposed to pay. The individuals on the other hand have to pay straight forward taxes based on W2s which some deductions.

So raising your boss’s tax rate is not going to effect your job or the health of the company you work for. Just the tax system will become better and more stream-lined.

I have tried to explain this as simply as possible. I know some of you are going to ask for sources, but you are no websites that will tell it to you in one paragraph. It is common sense if you want to understand it.

How much in taxes will I owe For 2009 If…..,?

 

I have estimated that I have made approx 35K this year , I am a small business owner and after all my deductions in expenses ( Business rent , and other receipts) I will have walked away with 35K this year , I am filing single with no depend ants in the state or Oregon I have paid no estimated payments and would like to know what I will be looking at as far as all my taxes including Social Security , Fed Income Tax , Sate Income Tax , Medicare ? Also what kind of stimulus will be coming if any?
Thanks..

If you need more info please ask

Kinda long but please read and tell me what you think?

 

No matter what your choice is, does this sound ok to you?

WASHINGTON — Barack Obama has a disturbing habit of saying things that are not true, such as no one who makes less than 0,000 will pay higher taxes under his tax plans.

He is running saturation ads around the country saying this, but the fact is that lots of people will be paying higher taxes beneath that income level (which will raise the top marginal tax rate from 35 percent to nearly 40 percent). In fact, millions of Americans who now pay no income taxes will get "refundable" checks from the government under his plan (but more on that in a minute).

The liberal senator would raise capital-gains tax rates on the sale of stocks or other assets on the gain in their value when they’re sold. That would mean higher taxes on millions of American families preparing for their retirement.

He’d raise taxes on dividends, too, that would impose higher taxes on Americans whose income depends on those hard-earned dividends.

If you run a small business that earns 0,000 or more and you pay taxes on its earnings as an individual taxpayer (though you pay yourself less than that), you will be hit by his higher income tax.

His plan proposes to get rid of a lot of corporate tax "loopholes," which would mean higher taxes that would be passed on to their customers who make a lot less than 0,000.

But the most disingenuous part of his tax plan is his claim that he will give 95 percent of all American workers a "tax cut," because he does not mention that it will mean sending checks to millions of tax filers who pay no personal income taxes.

Critics say that looks "suspiciously like welfare" or income redistribution from wealthier taxpayers to lower-income Americans. But it also raises the question, How can he call it a "tax cut" when its recipients pay no income taxes?

Under his "Making Work Pay" income tax cut for low- to middle-income people, he will give a "refundable" 0 tax credit to low- to middle-income workers or ,000 to couples. It would begin to phase out at ,000 for individuals and 0,000 for a couple.

But because he makes it "refundable," he will pay the equivalent amount to those who have no income-tax liability after taking the usual tax credits and deductions in the tax code. Those checks would come from taxes to be paid by higher-income Americans.

The Internal Revenue Service says nearly 46 million tax filers — one-third of all filers — had no tax liability in 2006, so you can hardly call this a tax cut because they pay no taxes.

"What he’s really talking about doing is mailing a check and, to me, that looks more like a welfare program than the kind of real tax relief that would encourage work, savings and investments," said Phil Kerpen, policy director at Americans for Prosperity, a free-market advocacy group.

Obama claims that almost all workers (95 percent) will benefit from his "tax cuts." But Investor’s Business Daily points out that Obama’s "’working families’ does not include all households. Throw in singles, retirees, students and the unemployed, and the share getting some tax-related benefit is a good deal less."

The Tax Policy Center, a nonpartisan tax-analysis group established by the liberal Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution, dismisses his 95 percent figure, saying that about 80 percent of households would receive a tax cut. Throw in the tens of millions of tax filers who owe no taxes, and the percentage of taxpayers getting real tax cuts falls a lot lower.

The Obama campaign’s chief economist Jason Furman told me in an e-mail that "the tens of millions of families working hard and paying payroll taxes do not think that tax cuts are a form of ‘welfare’ or ‘redistribution’ — they think it is only fair to reward work."

Roberton Williams of the Tax Policy Center said "one can argue" that workers who don’t pay income taxes "are paying Social Security payroll taxes, and this is a tax cut against that."

But is this just another clever way for Obama to redistribute the nation’s income, taking from high-income taxpayers who pay the lion’s share of all income taxes and giving it to lower-income workers who pay none?

Williams doesn’t dispute this. "You could view it that way because both (tax) proposals are in the same tax plan," he said. "There’s no question that’s one way to perceive the tax plan." Exactly.

So this is what’s at the core of Obama’s economic policies — taking more money from one group of taxpayers and directly transferring it to those in the lower- to middle-income tax brackets who pay little or no income taxes to begin with.

Instead of cutting everyone’s taxes to encourage work, investment and savings by enlarging the economic pie, Obama would redivide the pie into smaller slices and redistribute it through the tax system.

This is the Europeanization of the economy that awaits us under an Obama presidency.

Anyone with good ideas how the government can help us with the gas price ripoff? I have a few.?

 

ways government can help citizens who are strapped because of the gas price gouging ripoff:
1- Mileage tax deduction: based on odometer readings over a year. This will also help truckers, taxi drivers, & others who make their living by driving. This would be based on the IRS standard mileage allowance. That way, those who have to drive a long way to work or buy groceries will get some tax relief. It would also help the economy by helping those who want to go on a vacation trip.
2- Tax deduction if you buy a car that gets good mpg: 25+ (Not just Bugs and Echos)
3- Anyone who makes less than a million dollars and doesn’t own a car would pay no income tax.
4- Tuneups and other expenses to improve car performance and gas mileage would be deductible.
5- Those who take trains or buses to work could deduct fares.
6- Tax breaks for businesses who let their employees work from home as much as possible.
Can you think of others?

Canada: Deducting investment losses off of your income?

 

In 2005 I loaned money personally to a Canadian business and lost all of it (the company went bankrupt before it could repay the loan). At that time I was employed full time in another job (and still am today). My question is are there any deductions I can make for the money I lost on that investment from the regular income I make? It seems totally unfair that I have to pay so much income tax now based on my salary when in fact I LOST so much money in my investment.

A New Tax Code…and Idea. Thoughts?

 

OK, it’s very simple.

You pay a 5% flat tax on all income. No deductions. AND you pay a 5% consumption tax on everything purchased.

We raise the "poverty level" to something that makes sense, and those that are below this, get all their 5% flat tax refunded. But they still have to pay the 5% consumption tax (of course, welfare will still be there to supplement to some degree).

Perhaps we could exclude certain necessities (prescriptions, basic foods, etc.)

Businesses would pay either 5% of profit…or 2% of revenues…WHICHEVER IS THE GREATEST. Why? Because if it’s whichever is the least, they’ll make sure that the figure it such that their profits are virtually non-existent.

Takes away the 1000′s of pages of income tax prep.

Congress doesn’t get as much? TOUGH! Learn to make the wise, hard decisions the rest of us have to make ever payday. Forced efficiency will result. Forget "revenue neutral."

Thoughts?

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