Archive for November, 2011

Tax Avoidance and Tax Evasion…What’s the Difference?

Thursday, November 24th, 2011

Depending on who you ask, some people may say that tax avoidance is either “smart business” or it’s “immoral”. But, if done correctly, there’s one thing it’s not…It’s not illegal. There are numerous ways that a person can decrease his or her tax liability legally: 1. Claiming deductions 2. Incorporating. 3. Setting up a charitable trust or foundation.

 More complicated and controversial methods include setting up an offshore company, trust or foundation in an offshore jurisdiction. Tax evasion, on the other hand, is the willful act of misrepresenting financial information to avoid the tax liability. Common forms of tax evasion are understating income, wages or gains on the sale of property and/or overstating tax deductions.

 What’s the Difference? To keep it simple – think of it this way: Tax avoidance is the maneuvering to avoid the tax liability in the first place. The tax does not exist, because in a legal sense, no income, profit or gain ever existed. Tax evasion is maneuvering to avoid the payment of a tax liability that has already been created. The tax exists because the income, profit or gain already exists. To avoid paying the tax is a criminal act.

 Why Would the Government Allow Tax Avoidance? Obviously, no government could function if all its citizens legally avoided paying taxes. While there are legal means of tax avoidance that every citizen has a right to put into practice, there are also “abusive tax avoidance strategies” that the IRS warns against openly. These include: a. Anti-Tax Law Schemes b. Abusive Home-Based Business Schemes c. Abusive Trust Schemes d. Misuse of the Disabled Access Credit e. Abusive Offshore Schemes f. Employee Plans Abusive Tax Transactions g. Exempt Organization Abusive Tax Avoidance Transactions.

 The IRS tows a hard line with the promotion of Illegal Tax Schemes posing as Legal Tax Avoidance Strategies.

Tax Avoidance has always had its share of hucksters and scam artists who appeal to the “greed mechanism” present in some taxpayers, by selling “get out of paying tax legally” kits and seminars.

 If Your Name is On a List of a Tax Shelter Promoter—The IRS is Watching You. In a recent effort to cut down on abusive tax avoidance scheme, the Department of Justice is now requiring promoters of tax shelters to make their list of clients available to the IRS. If called upon, these promoters must give names as well as details of the transactions. For abusive tax schemes, this provision has proven to be an effective means for the IRS catching not only the promoter…but also the clients.

 Do What’s Right…But Get Legal Help If You’re Unsure. If you’ve participated in a tax avoidance strategy and you find yourself questioning if it was legal, don’t wait to find out “the hard way”.  Remember, even if you’ve been involved in an illegal tax avoidance scheme, you can still make restitution for your actions without it ending up in a jail sentence. But there’s no question that you’ll need competent legal help in this situation.

Can the IRS take your Social Security?

Friday, November 18th, 2011

YES.  The IRS can take your Social Security to satisfy a tax debt.

In fact , in July 2000, not only did the new Federal Payment Levy Program allow the IRS to dip into some Social Benefits paid to you, but it can also take money that you’ve received from:

-Federal employee retirement annuities

-Federal payments made to you as a contractor/vendor doing business with the government (including DEfense contracts)

-Federal employee travel advances or reimbursements

-And some federal salaries

Here’s The IRS Damage You Can’t See…Yet

Friday, November 11th, 2011

Are you worried about your IRS problem? Losing sleep? Join the club. I hear that a lot. People will sit up at night and let their IRS problems eat away at them, night after night…causing them to lose sleep.

 Is Your IRS Problem Worth Sacrificing Your Health…Or Your Life? Stress can be a killer, literally. Stress can lead to heart attack, hypertension, stroke, cancer, diabetes, depression, obesity, eating disorders, substance abuse, ulcers, irritable bowel syndrome, memory loss, autoimmune diseases (e.g. lupus), insomnia, thyroid problems, and even infertility.

 Procrastinating and hoping that your IRS problems will just go away  is causing you a boatload of stress…But chances are that you may not have considered what that stress is doing to your body on a long-term basis.

 The Effects On Your Marriage. Numerous studies have shown that money problems are the #1 source of arguments in marriage. Money problems caused by credit debt, loss of a job, unforeseen expenses – you name it…all can be stressful on a marriage. But if you toss IRS problem into the mix, you may have a recipe for disaster.

 The IRS has more far-reaching power than any collection agency could. So if money problems cause arguments, IRS problems can cause absolute fallout. Divorce follows as a result, it introduces another whole host of problems emotionally and financially.

You Have One Chance at Life (as far as I know…) Don’t Waste Another Minute Worrying About the IRS. The average life expectancy of an American male is 73 years. If you live this long, and you spend 5 years worrying about the IRS – that means a full 6% of your lifetime was spent in the shadow of an IRS problem.

 That’s too long. Plus, considering the fact that stress and sleep deprivation could actually shorten your lifespan…that 6% number could be greater. If you die at 60 and you spent 5 years worrying about the IRS, that’s over 8% of your lifetime. Don’t you have better things to think about? Of course you do. Although you may have forgotten them in a sea of worry…at one time you had dreams & goals – things you wanted to do in this life before you die.

IRS No Longer Limits the Innocence of a Spouse

Friday, November 4th, 2011

The IRS is making some common sense reforms to some of its arbitrary rules by instituting new guidelines in connection with “innocent spouse relief requests”.

 An innocent spouse is classified as a person that had no knowledge that his or her spouse was defrauding the IRS by underpaying their taxes.

 Until this change in regulation, there was a two year limit that was applied to any innocent spouse attempting to file a relief request. The change applies to all future requests and will retroactively be applied to previously denied claims.

 The IRS change only applies to the equitable relief provision. This provision absolves the innocent spouse of any liability in paying past due taxes and relieves them of any interest or penalties associated with the unpaid taxes. Innocent spouses must prove that at the time of signing the joint tax return, they had no knowledge of any wrongdoing on behalf of the guilty spouse.

 If a request is approved, the IRS allows the innocent spouse to pay the taxes that they are responsible for, but relieves them of any penalties and fines associated with the misfiling of the taxes.

 The intent of the law was that an innocent spouse would have two years to file a request for relief. However, this law did not take into account spouses that were victims of domestic violence and abuse.

 Many members of congress have been lobbying for a change in the regulation for some time now. The IRS receives 50,000 requests annually for innocent spouse relief. Of those 50,000, 4%, or 2,000, requests are rejected because they are outside the 2 year limit.

 This change in policy will now help 2,000 innocent spouses avoid the penalties and fines for something that they were never aware was happening.

 All future requests will be processed without looking at a term limit. However, if you have had a previous request denied due to the 2 year limit, you must file an IRS Form 8857 “Request for innocent spouse relief”. The IRS will not apply the two year limit in any active litigation.