T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
617.1 | | CRATWO::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jan 14 1991 10:12 | 9 |
|
3400??? Please tell me that was part time! That's less than half
what I was paying for one child eight years ago!
As to deductions, they are all spelled out in the instruction/form
booklet that you probably received about 2 weeks ago.
- Bruce
|
617.2 | Yes, but this is NM | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Mon Jan 14 1991 10:33 | 8 |
| No, Bruce, it is full-time but then this is Albuquerque, too.
Maybe we should be grateful, but we could have sent our son to the
University of New Mexico for the year for less than what a year
at daycare cost. Plus the fact that it was about 10% of our family
income. Guess it is just hard since this is our first full year
of daycare expenses and money has been tight.....
Pam
|
617.3 | Every little bit helps | VICKI::SUITTER | | Mon Jan 14 1991 10:52 | 11 |
| I pay 4680.00 a year for full-time daycare and live in Southern NH.
Six years ago I was paying 3380.00 year. She starts first grade next
year and I can't wait so we don't have to pay out that much anymore.
As for taxes you can only claim upto 2400.00 and then you only get
a percentage of that.
I guess every little bit back helps.
ps
|
617.4 | Able to Claim $2,400. | BRAT::MORIN | | Mon Jan 14 1991 12:13 | 4 |
| I paid $3,900 full time daycare in Merrimack NH and was told that I
could claim up to $2,400.
|
617.5 | How's it paid out? | WORDY::STEINHART | | Mon Jan 14 1991 14:36 | 14 |
| Can someome please explain to this new mother how the withheld money is
paid out? I need to know by tomorrow to discuss with my accountant.
By the way, licensed family day care in southern NH for an infant runs
$100-$150 per week! It drops to $85-$125 for children 1 year old.
Unlicensed here runs about $85 for infants. You New Mexico folks are
lucky. NH commuters to Mass. (we are legion) pay 6% income tax in Mass
AND very high property taxes. Add in day care, and there isn't much
left at week's end. With New England's economic woes, its grey days
for our pocketbooks.
Enough griping. Thanks for any info on the daycare deduction payout.
Laura
|
617.6 | Not lucky in NM-just broke! | ELMAGO::PHUNTLEY | | Mon Jan 14 1991 15:58 | 6 |
| Just a point...New Mexico folks are NOT lucky--it is all relative.
Yes, daycare is cheaper as is housing as is food, etc. but so are
the WAGES!!! I think this is true just about anywhere--we all end
up short at the end of the week, no matter where we live!!! :^(
Pam
|
617.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 14 1991 17:58 | 28 |
| There are two different methods for reducing your taxes due to child
care expenses.
The first, and oldest, is the "Child Care Tax Credit". This is filed using
IRS form 2441. The way it works is that you can get a credit for a percentage
of your expenses up to $2400 per child. The percentage varies by income,
the more income, the less the percentage, down to a minimum of 20%. I don't
know what the maximum is. So if your expenses are more than $2400 and your
income is over a certain amount, you get a credit of 20% of $2400 which is
$480. This is not a deduction, it is a credit applied against your taxes
paid, and it is possible for the government to actually send you money if your
taxes owed are less than the credit. In no case do you get a credit of
the full $2400, though.
The newer method is the Dependent Care Recovery Account or DCRA. You have
to sign up for this at the end of the year and specify an amount which is to
be deducted from your paycheck each week. Then you submit receipts for
qualified expenses to the administrator (John Hancock) and they send you
a check. The benefit is that the amount taken out of your check is not
subject to federal income or social security taxes.
Another point is that if you try to claim both kinds of benefit, the
amount of expenses you can claim on the form 2441 is reduced by the amount
you had deducted for the DCRA. You have to look at your expenses to see
which method makes sense for you. For most people in the higher income
brackets, the DCRA is more beneficial.
Steve
|
617.8 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 14 1991 21:13 | 11 |
| Looking at the form, I see a couple of things of import. First,
for the tax credit, the maximum expenses you can claim are $2400 for
one child, $4800 for two or more, so it's not really $2400 per
child. Second, the percentage is 30% for incomes under $10,000,
sliding to 20% for incomes over $28,000. Also, the expenses
claimed are limited by the smaller of your income or your spouse's
income, if married and filing jointly.
If you get the full form 1040 package, it contains form 2441 and
instructions.
Steve
|
617.9 | tax procedures for DCRA? | SWSCIM::DIAZ | | Tue Jan 15 1991 10:48 | 11 |
| Steve,
Excuse me for asking again. I can't quite remember what happened last
year with the DCRA. When my W4 comes will my gross income reflect my
wages before my DC deduction? And since I am enrolled in the DCRA, am
I required to fill out a 2441 with my return?
In other words, can you give me a synopsis of filing a tax return using
just the DCRA.
Thanks, Jan
|
617.10 | | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Tue Jan 15 1991 11:43 | 6 |
| You're W4 will show your gross income LESS the amount deducted for
daycare, e.g., if you make $30K and spent $4K on daycare, it will show
$27K.
T.
|
617.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jan 15 1991 12:06 | 9 |
| Actually, it will show both. The "Box 10" figure will be your taxable wages,
and there is a separate box for the Dependent Care amount. Yes, you must
fill in form 2441, at least part of it. Last year, there was an instruction
to write in a notation somewhere on form 1040 of the amount of "DCF", though
it wasn't taxable. I haven't looked at the forms closely enough to see
how it works this year. I'll study the instructions and get back here
with more details.
Steve
|
617.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 16 1991 08:59 | 19 |
| Ok, here's the scoop. If you contributed to DCRA and are not taking
the Child Care Tax Credit, you must still fill out and attach form
2441 to your return.
In part I, you list the persons or organizations who provided care
and the amounts paid. You skip part II. In part III, you enter
on line 17 the amount you contributed and subtract any forfeited
amount. From this you subtract the smallest of (total expenses
paid, your income, spouse's income, $5000). The difference (if
greater than zero) is a taxable benefit and must be included
in the total on line 7 of form 1040, and you write in "DCB" next
to line 7.
See the form 2441 instructions for more details.
One thing this points out is that there is a limit of $5000 of
tax-exempt contributions.
Steve
|
617.13 | Babysitter having PMS | CSC32::D_GUARA | | Wed Jan 16 1991 10:59 | 33 |
|
What options do I have.....
Last week I requested from my babysitter (private home)
a rec for tax's. She got rather upset and said if I
file it on my tax's then she has to file it on hers. She
said last year she didn't have to but this year she does.
Her husband is a manager and has been with his company for
15+ years. She insist that if she has to claim her baby-
sitting income that it will put them in a higher bracket
and she will have to pay $400 some odd $'s.
We had no problem last year, just now all the sudden. We
discussed not putting her name on the tax's. She said if
I do file and put her name on that she will have to raise
my babysitting fee 50%.
I personally don't want to loose her as a babysitter, as
she has an ideal home, surroundings, everything, but...
what is she trying to do here ?????
and what can I do ? Is there anyway I can claim my
babysitting without putting a name on the tax form ?
Any info would be greatly appreciated, if more info
is needed I will fill in any gaps.
Thanks in advance
deb g
|
617.14 | Check Out Parenting, V.2 | MR4DEC::POLAKOFF | | Wed Jan 16 1991 11:23 | 17 |
|
I'm pretty sure that you need to supply the IRS with her SS# in order
to take a deduction. There is an extensive discussion on this in
Parenting V.2 as I recall. Basically, the discussion was divided into
2 camps--those who felt babysitters or providers make little enought
without having to pay taxes on the $ they do make--and those who
thought these people are breaking the law and should due the right
thing and pay taxes on the $ they make. Of these 2 camps, people were
divided as to whether they would pull their kids out of a daycare where
the provider was trying to cheat the gov't. It was a pretty intense
discussion, as I recall. You might want to check it out...
Bonnie
|
617.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 16 1991 11:58 | 4 |
| If you want to claim the tax credit, or use DCRA, the provider MUST give
you their SSN or tax ID number. If you don't have it, you can't claim.
Steve
|
617.16 | used to be a form | TLE::RANDALL | Now *there's* the snow! | Wed Jan 16 1991 12:11 | 6 |
| Last year there was a form you could fill out and attach saying
that you had tried to get the SSN from the caregiver and couldn't.
I don't remember exactly what the rules were and they might well
have closed that loophole this year.
--bonnie
|
617.17 | thanks for the IRS info | SWSCIM::DIAZ | | Wed Jan 16 1991 13:09 | 17 |
| Thanks for the info Steve, I knew I was in trouble when I mentioned
the "W4" instead of "W2".
As far as the babysitter not wanting you to give her SS#. When I first
brought this up with my sitter, she did not want to do this either.
Together we agree on a fee which was higher (by $15 so it's not the
50% you are talking about) than her other charges. The next year my
sitter obtained her daycare license so I just assumed that she is
charging any new clients her new increased rate. Also she is writing
off home depreciation, etc. on her taxes.
The point I trying to make (the mind is mush) is that initially I was
the only parent requesting receipts and the only one being charged the
higher rate, but that rate was agreed upon as as offset to the
additional taxes she would need to pay to claim her fee as income.
Jan
|
617.18 | No marginal tax rates over 100% | MINAR::BISHOP | | Wed Jan 16 1991 13:41 | 25 |
| The business about the "higher bracket" is baloney.
As your income increases (e.g. form $X to $X+d), your taxes
increase (from $Y to $Y+e), but at _no_point_ is the increase
in taxes ($e) more than the increase in income ($d).
When she doesn't report:
IRS sees their income as: $A
So tax is: $a
Plus unreported income: $B
----
Leaving: $(A-a) + B
If she did report:
IRS sees income as: $A+B
So tax is: $a+b (b will be smaller than B)
------
Leaving: $(A-a) + (B-b)
So she's quibbling about "b", which will be between a quarter and
a third of the money she makes doing day-care.
-John Bishop
|
617.19 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 16 1991 15:37 | 16 |
| Re: .18
John, your logic is unassailable, but it won't make a shred of difference
to someone who doesn't see why Uncle Sam should get ANY of the money they're
bringing in. It's not THEIR problem that the parent wants to get a deduction!
I think Jan's solution is the best.
Re: .16
I don't recall such a form, but I am sure that the IRS would pay close
attention to your giving the name and address of the provider who didn't
have the SSN - they'd then go look to see if the provider was reporting the
taxes. The SSN just makes their job easier.
Steve
|
617.20 | | CRATWO::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Jan 17 1991 14:19 | 31 |
| The argument in .18 is baloney.
Being in a "higher bracket" does not require that your marginal tax rate
exceed 100%, only that it increase. Under the older tax laws, with many
brackets, it was quite common to have a modest increase in income push one
into a higher bracket. It is still perfectly possible with the new, nearly
flat, tax rates. In effect, it is almost a certainty, since any increase in
income will raise your average tax rate, even if you don't switch brackets.
In any case, marginal income is almost always taxed at a rate higher than
average income. She probably really meant that because of her husband's
income, she had to pay a lot of taxes. And that is entirely plausible. With
federal, possibly state, and social security taxes (the last at twice the
usual rate, since she is self-employed), she is very likely to have to pay
more than 50% of her additional income out in taxes, if declared. Thus a
"surcharge" of 50% is not unreasonable at all. Such a rate does not even
require high income on the part of a spouse.
The issue is a legal/moral one. Our social system encourages everyone to
have opinions on what constitutes a fair tax system. However, such opinions
are supposed to be expressed through our legislative system. Individuals are
discouraged from acting directly on their opinions by disregarding the tax
laws, for the benefit of themselves or anyone else. While a parent paying
for care of a child in the provider's home does not have to report the
payments (unless they want to claim the credit) or withhold taxes, accepting
a major discount in exchange for complicity in tax evasion is pretty dicey.
In earlier discussions of this same issue, some noters have also wondered
whether providers willing to take shortcuts with the tax code might not also
be willing to take shortcuts with child care.
- Bruce
|
617.21 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jan 17 1991 14:45 | 5 |
| re .-1:
Actually, if her marginal rate is 28% federal and 5% state and self-employment
tax is 15.3%, more than half of her income goes to taxes. Her "surcharge"
should be more than 100%, which would probably price her out of the market.
|
617.22 | | CRATWO::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Jan 17 1991 15:44 | 13 |
|
In re: .21
Indeed, in saying that a 50% surcharge was "not unreasonable" I meant that it
would not even cover her taxes.
Your argument about being priced out of the market is quite upside down.
Most childcare is supplied by people who are paying taxes (either
self-employed or through a center). Any provider who asks you to conspire to
help him/her evade taxes "ought" to offer you a discount of 50%!
- Bruce
|
617.23 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Thu Jan 17 1991 16:03 | 22 |
| re .20 re .18...
While it is true that the daycare provider might, if she declared her income,
have to pay an exorbitant portion of it (50%+) in taxes, I think that most
people, when they say "it would push me into a higher bracket", mean that
they would end up paying at a higher rate *on the income that they were
already being taxed on*. Since the "higher rate" applies only to the
marginal income, this (generally) just doesn't happen under the US tax
system. I know of no circumstances (although I'm sure that there are
some bizarre ones) where the consequence of declaring $X of income could
actually be an increase of more than $X in tax liability.
---------------------------------------
Putting on my moderator hat for a moment:
Disagreement with other's opinions is a perfectly legitimate form of expression
in this conference. Characterizing other's opinions as "baloney" or making
similar comments does not make a useful contribution to a discussion, and
we *strongly* discourage it here.
-Neil
|
617.24 | | CRATWO::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Jan 17 1991 16:58 | 22 |
| In re: .23
This makes no sense to me. Why would most people use the phrase in
question to refer to something that could never happen?
I think "a higher bracket" is both simple and clear. The general
method for calculating taxes, as expressed in the basic tax tables, is:
If you make at least $M, but not more than $N, then you
owe $W taxes plus P% of the income above $M.
That's one bracket; the next one starts at $N + $.01, etc. The
characteristic is that not only does $W increase with each bracket, but
P% increases, too. The old tax code had about umpteen different
brackets, the new one has 3 (right?). There is certainly no
implication in the phrase "higher bracket" that the marginal rate (P%)
be greater than 100%.
- Bruce
p.s. I apologize for the word "baloney", which I included precisely
because I found its use in .18 to be offensive. That was tacky.
|
617.25 | Marginal vs. total--many people don't understand | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jan 18 1991 11:21 | 40 |
| From personal experience, I have found that many people do not
understand the difference between marginal rates and total rates
in the U.S. income tax system.
These people believe that if you are in the 25 percent bracket,
then you pay 25 percent of your income, and if you are in the 33
percent bracket, then you pay 33 percent of your income. They
therefore believe that if your income goes over the the limit of
the 25 percent bracket, even if only by one dollar, that you then
must pay much more tax. Expressed in marginal terms, the marginal
tax rate on that one dollar is well over 100 percent.
Now, you and I know this is not the case, but many people do
believe this to be true (and often will not change their opinion
when told differently!). Given that many such people exist, those
who wish to manipulate others into conniving at tax avoidance may
well choose to pretend to believe this way. If the person being
manipulated is ignorant in the fashion outlined above, then he or
she will be easier to persuade that the supposed super-high tax on
the marginal income should be avoided, while if the person being
manipulated is not ignorant, he or she will have previous
experience with people having this misunderstanding, and may well
not wish to take the time to educate before bargaining, or may
expect not to be believed if he or she tries to educate the
manipulator.
When I read the initial note, in which the babysitter was reported
as expressing a desire to avoid a change in brackets, it seemed to
me clear that the babysitter was either ignorant or attempting to
manipulate the noter in the manner outlined above. In either case
(ignorance or deception), "baloney" is appropriate, if informal.
I suspect the latter alternative is the case, i.e. this is a
deliberate attempt to con the noter, as we already know the
babysitter is trying to convince the noter to assist her in
avoiding taxes legally due.
I'm sorry Mr. Collier thought my remark tacky, and I hope this
explains my note.
-John Bishop
|
617.26 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jan 18 1991 13:00 | 17 |
| There are, indeed, many confused people in the world, John, but it still
puzzles me that you think this provider was among them. The original note
(.13) stated that the provider believed that her tax increase if she reported
the additional income (presumably for only a single child) would be between
$400 and $500. We don't know what the income in question was, but surely it
was a lot more than that. My guess is that she in fact had significantly
underestimated the tax (perhaps forgetting Social Security). At least it is
implausible that she was suggesting a massive tax increase, or an over 100%
marginal rate. It would have made no sense to propose a 50% surcharge if she
had been. It also seems clear that the noter herself was unconfused. I thus
see no justification in labelling the provider as being guilty of either
"ignorance or deception."
- Bruce
p.s. It wasn't your use of "baloney" that I called "tacky", John, but
my copying it.
|
617.27 | Social Security Numbers for Daycare Providers | ELWOOD::POPIENIUCK | | Tue Feb 11 1992 11:08 | 20 |
| This past week I went to have my taxes done at the account. I
ran across the problem of not having a past daycare providers social
security number for the child care deduction. Unfortunately when
I terminated the daycare provider, we left on bad terms.
I called the Office of Children for this woman's S.S. number, but
providers are not required to give their S.S. numbers when applying
for a license. She recommended I send a letter to the provider
requesting the S.S. number for tax purposes, with a returned receipt
request attached. The Office of Children said, if the provider refuses to
provide the number the IRS will accept a copy of the letter and
the the return receipt.
I thought I would pass this along so others could avoid the hassle of
worrying how to get around this problem.
Chris
|