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PRESS RELEASE

MAY 2010

 

Contact Person

Lynette Larson, Marketing Assistant


Phone

(717) 843-0040  


Email

llarson@sfc-cpa.com





Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act

May 2010

 

Dear Clients and Friends:

To help increase business hiring and spending, Congress has passed, and President Obama has signed, the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act (H.R. 2847). The HIRE Act provides for payroll tax forgiveness and an employer tax credit of up to $1,000 for qualified new hires. The HIRE Act also extends enhanced Code Sec. 179 small business expensing and makes some enhancements to tax credit bonds. These measures are paid for, in part, by comprehensive reforms to the reporting and disclosure of accounts in foreign financial institutions, a further delay in implementation of worldwide allocation of interest and an acceleration of certain corporate estimated income tax payments. The HIRE Act is expected to be the first of several targeted jobs bills to be passed by Congress in 2010.


Hiring Incentives:

The HIRE Act provides qualified employers with temporary payroll tax forgiveness of the employer's 6.2 percent share of Social Security payroll taxes on wages paid to new hires who had been previously unemployed. Payroll tax forgiveness is effective for qualified employees on wages earned for work after March 18, 2010 and on or before December 31, 2010. A qualified employee must begin work any time after February 3, 2010 and before January 1, 2011. The employer generally must be a private sector, for-profit or tax-exempt employer (with some limited exceptions).


The newly hired worker must not have been employed for more than 40 hours during the 60-day period ending on the date that the individual begins employment. Additionally, the newly hired employee cannot displace a worker who is currently on the employer's payroll unless the worker voluntarily separated from employment or was separated from employment for cause. Newly hired individuals who are related to the employer or who own (directly or indirectly) more than 50 percent of the business are ineligible. A qualified individual may be hired for any number of hours, full-time or part-time, since the benefits to the employer are tied only to 6.2 percent of any salary paid.


The HIRE Act requires that individuals certify they have not been employed for more than 40 hours during the 60-day period ending on the date they begin employment. Certification is made by an employee by completing Form W-11, the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act Employee Affidavit.  The signed affidavit must be retained by the employer.


ABC Co. hires Jean on January 25, 2010 as a full-time employee working 40 hours each week. ABC hires Luis on February 15, 2010 as a full-time employee working 40 hours each week. ABC hires Sam on March 1, 2010 as a full-time employee working 40 hours each week. Jean, Luis and Sam all certify that they had not been employed for more than 40 hours during the 60-day period ending on the date that they began employment with ABC Co. However, Jean is not a qualified employee for purposes of payroll tax forgiveness under the HIRE Act because her hire date is before February 4, 2010. Luis and Sam are qualified employees for purposes of payroll tax forgiveness because their hire dates are after February 3, 2010.


Keep in mind that the HIRE Act's payroll tax forgiveness applies only to the employer's share of Social Security taxes. Employers remain liable for Medicare payroll taxes. The worker also must pay his or her share of Social Security taxes as well as federal income taxes.


The HIRE Act also provides that the direct payroll tax holiday will not apply to wages paid during the first calendar quarter of 2010. Instead, whatever tax holiday amount would have been allowed for first quarter 2010 will instead be credited against the employer's general OASDI liability for the second quarter of 2010. Beginning for any new-hire wages paid starting April 1, an employer takes direct OASDI forgiveness into account in depositing payroll taxes under the regular deposit rule applicable to that employer.


Retained Worker Business Credit:

Under the HIRE Act, employers that hire new workers who qualify for payroll tax forgiveness may also be eligible for a tax credit for each qualified employee. For the employer to be entitled to this new credit, the qualified employee must be retained on the employer's payroll for 52 consecutive weeks. The business credit under Code Sec. 38 will be increased, with respect to each qualified retained worker, by the lesser of $1,000 or 6.2 percent of wages paid by the taxpayer to the qualified retained worker during the 52-week period.


A qualified retained worker must be paid an amount equal to at least 80 percent of his first 26 weeks of wages during the last 26 weeks of the 52-week qualifying period. The HIRE Act excludes wages earned by a domestic worker or an individual eligible for the foreign earned income exclusion. The HIRE Act also includes carry-back rules for the credit.


If you have any questions about payroll tax forgiveness or the retained worker business credit, please contact our office for more details.


Expensing: 

Under Code Sec. 179, businesses can elect to recover all or part of the cost of qualifying property, up to a limit, by deducting it in the year it is placed in service. Before the HIRE Act, Code Sec. 179 expensing for 2010 was limited to $125,000 with a $500,000 cap (both amounts adjusted for inflation). The HIRE Act raises the dollar limit to $250,000 and the cap to $800,000 (the same amounts in place in 2009). Under the HIRE Act, write-offs can be taken under phase-out rules until qualified purchases reach $1,050,000. The HIRE Act applies to qualified purchases made in tax years beginning after December 31, 2009 and before January 1, 2011. The HIRE Act also provides that off-the-shelf computer software, a popular business purchase, is Code Sec. 179 property.


Foreign Accounts: 

The Bank Secrecy Act requires taxpayers to report if they have a financial interest in, signature authority or other authority over one or more accounts in a foreign country, and the value of the account exceeds $10,000 at any time during the calendar year. The Bank Secrecy Act does not prohibit taxpayers from owning a foreign bank account. It just requires reporting and disclosure. The rules apply to all citizens and residents of the U.S. as well as domestic corporations, estates, partnerships and trusts.


The HIRE Act imposes additional reporting and disclosure requirements on taxpayers and financial institutions. Generally, individuals with accounts in foreign financial institutions must disclose on their federal tax returns the name of the financial institution, the account number and the maximum value of the asset during the tax year. The aggregate value of the foreign financial assets must exceed $50,000 for the disclosure requirements to apply. The HIRE Act provides penalties for failing to disclose. The penalties range from a low of $10,000 to a high of $50,000. A 40 percent penalty will apply to the portion of any underpayment attributable to an undisclosed foreign financial asset.


Foreign financial institutions will also be subject to heightened reporting requirements. Generally, foreign financial institutions will be required, among other things, to report the name, address and tax identification number (TIN) of each account holder who is a specified U.S. person. The HIRE Act also will require withholding agents -- starting after 2012 -- to withhold 30 percent of certain payments to foreign financial institutions that do not agree to the new reporting requirements.


Along with the heightened reporting and disclosure measures, the HIRE Act also increases the statute of limitations to six years for failure to report certain offshore transactions and income. The HIRE Act also clarifies when a foreign trust is considered to have a U.S. beneficiary and addresses the treatment of substitute dividends and dividend equivalent payments.


The foreign account compliance measures in the HIRE Act are very complex. The IRS is expected to issue guidance on the measures. Please contact our office if you have any questions about the foreign account compliance provisions in the HIRE Act.


Worldwide Allocation of Interest:

Qualified taxpayers may elect to take advantage of a rule for allocating interest expense between U.S. sources and foreign sources for purposes of determining a taxpayer's foreign tax credit limitation. Implementation of worldwide allocation of interest was enacted in 2004 but has been delayed several times. The HIRE Act further delays implementation to tax years beginning after 2020.


Pending Legislation: 

Congress continues to debate several other bills designed to stimulate economic growth. Pending bills include a package of extenders. These are popular but temporary tax breaks, which generally expired at the end of 2009.


If you have any questions about the HIRE Act or pending legislation, please contact our office.

 

Sincerely,


SF&COMPANY

 

 

York:                            (717) 843-0040

Wyntre Brooke:          (717) 741-0004

Shrewsbury:               (717) 227-0004

Camp Hill:                  (717) 761-0211

State College:            (814) 238-8474

 

 

Email:  info@sfc-cpa.com

 

To ensure compliance with the requirements imposed by the Internal Revenue Service, we inform you that any tax advice contained in this communication is not written or intended to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of avoiding penalties assessed under the Internal Revenue Code.


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