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Business Definition for: treatment of gains and losses
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landmark federal legislation enacted that made comprehensive changes in the system of U.S. taxation. Among the law's major provisions:
Provisions Affecting Individuals
- lowered maximum marginal tax rates from 50% to 28% beginning in 1988 and reduced the number of basic
tax bracket from 15 to 2-28% and 15%. Also instituted a 5% rate surcharge for highincome taxpayers. - eliminated the preferential tax treatment of
capital gain . Starting in 1988, all gains realized on asset sales were taxed at ordinary income rates, no matter how long the asset was held. - increased the personal exemption to $1,900 in 1987, $1,950 in 1988, and $2,000 in 1989. Phased out exemption for high-income taxpayers.
- increased the
standard deduction , and indexed it to inflation starting in 1989. - repealed the deduction for two-earner married couples.
- repealed income averaging for all taxpayers.
- repealed the $100 ($200 for couples) dividend exclusion.
- restricted the deductibility of IRA contributions.
- mandated the phaseout of consumer interest deductibility by 1991.
- allowed investment interest expense to be offset against investment income, dollar-for-dollar, without limitation.
- limited unreimbursed medical expenses that could be deducted to amounts in excess of 7.5% of adjusted gross income.
- limited the tax deductibility of interest on a first or second home mortgage to the purchase price of the house plus the cost of improvements and amounts used for medical or educational purposes.
- repealed the deductibility of state and local sales taxes.
- limited miscellaneous deductions to expenses exceeding 2% of adjusted gross income.
- limited the deductibility of itemized charitable contributions.
- strengthened the
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) , and raised the rate to 21%. - tightened home office deductions.
- lowered the deductibility of business entertainment and meal expenses from 100% to 80%.
- eliminated the benefits of
clifford trust and other incomeshifting devices by taxing unearned income over $1,000 on gifts to children under 14 years old at the grantor's tax rate. - repealed the tax credit for political contributions.
- limited the use of losses from
passive activity to offsetting income from passive activity. - lowered the top rehabilitation tax credit from 25% to 20%.
- made all unemployment compensation benefits taxable.
- repealed the deduction for attending investment seminars.
- eased the rules for exercise of
Incentive Stock Option (ISO) . - imposed new limitations on
salary reduction plan andSimplified Employee Pension (SEP) Plans . - lowered the top corporate tax rate to 34% from 46%, and lowered the number of corporate tax brackets from five to three.
- applied the
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) to corporations, and set a 20% rate. - repealed the investment tax credit for property placed in service after 1985.
- altered the method of calculating
depreciation . - limited the deductibility of charges to
bad debt reserves to financial institutions with less than $500 million in assets. - extended the research and development tax credit, but lowered the rate from 25% to 20%.
- eliminated the deductibility of interest that banks pay to finance tax-exempt securities holdings.
- eliminated the deductibility of
greenmail payments by companies warding off hostile takeover attempts. - restricted
completed contract method accounting for tax purposes. - limited the ability of a company acquiring more than 50% of another firm to use
Net Operating Losses to offset taxes. - reduced the corporate
dividend exclusion from 85% to 80%. - restricted tax-exemption on
municipal bond topublic purpose bond and specifiedprivate purpose bond . Imposed caps on the dollar amount of permitted private purpose bonds. Limitedprerefunding . Made interest on certain private purpose bonds subject to the AMT. - amended the rules for qualifying as a
Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) and the taxation of REITs. - set up tax rules for real estate mortgage investment conduits (REMICs).
- changed many rules relating to taxation of foreign operations of U.S. multinational companies.
- liberalized the requirements for employee
vesting rules in a company's qualified pension plan, and changed other rules affecting employee benefit plans. - enhanced benefit of
Subchapter S corporation status.
Provisions Affecting Business
Copyright © 2000, 1995, 1991, 1987 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. Reprinted by arrangement with Publisher.

