Taxes

Tax Day is just around the corner. The Tax Deadline to file your 2022 taxes is April 18, 2023. If you cannot complete your taxes by the tax filing deadline, you can request an automatic six-month extension to file your taxes. If you were wondering, the deadline to apply for a tax extension also falls
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Commonly, a businesses’ main concern is filing its tax returns. Although this makes sense, it is not wise, business owners must implement systems now for certain deductions and credits they plan to take in the future. To assist taxpayers, Congress offers incentives through deductions and credits. A deduction is an amount that you deduct from
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Still haven’t filed your taxes? There are certainly better ways to spend a weekend but if your weekend plans include tackling your annual Form 1040 and you missed Tuesday’s “Ask Me Anything” session, keep reading for a recap of some of the questions and answers and more information for last-minute filers. Do I Need To
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Social Security is routinely clawing back benefits it claims it paid by mistake over years if not decades. This policy is cruel and unusual. It’s based on Social Security’s despicable mantra: Our mistake is your mistake. It leaves 77 million Social Security recipients living in constant fear of having benefits received for years, if not
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Social Security benefits automatically convert to standard retirement benefits at full retirement age (FRA) and this retirement benefit can then be suspended. Here’s the story of one disability benefit recipient’s frustrating attempts to do so. I asked James (a pseudonym) to write up his experience in trying to suspend his retirement benefit starting with his
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Progressive mayors in Boston and Los Angeles have been joined by Chicago’s Brandon Johnson, all hoping not only to change criminal justice but also spend more on affordable housing, child care, education, and other progressive polices. But these progressives (along with a significant number of centrist mayors) will face serious budget and political challenges that
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Tax Notes contributing editor Robert Goulder discusses the history of bank secrecy, Credit Suisse’s role in it, and the bank’s recent collapse. This transcript has been edited for length and clarity. David D. Stewart: Welcome to the podcast. I’m David Stewart, editor in chief of Tax Notes Today International. This week: Can you keep a
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Unless you’ve been involved in a lawsuit, you may not know about structured settlements. You may have heard of them on late night TV. “It’s your money,” some TV ads will exclaim. “Cash in your structured settlement and use your money now!” These TV ads are from factoring companies that buy up lawsuit structured settlements,
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From what we can tell, Social Security is sending clawback bills to tens of thousands of Americans for mistakes it made. Social Security’s policy is cruel and unusual. Larry Kotlikoff is a Professor of Economics at Boston University and the founder and president of Economic Security Planning, Inc. Social Security is clawing back benefits it
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Over the past couple of weeks, the IRS has been rolling out its list of tax scams for 2023. Now that the IRS annual Dirty Dozen campaign has wrapped, here’s a look at what taxpayers should watch out for this year. Dirty Dozen The “Dirty Dozen” is an annual list of common scams taxpayers may
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April 7 marks the day that beer was allowed to be legally manufactured and sold following a long, dry Prohibition. On March 22, 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Cullen–Harrison Act into law, which moved the US away from Prohibition by allowing the manufacture and sale of beer that was approximately 4% alcohol by volume
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Thought you wanted to be a millionaire? The “Billionaire Tax” might cause you to reconsider. All American earners are subject to federal income taxes, but not everyone is subject to the same tax rate. While middle-class Americans pay, on average, roughly 14% in federal taxes annually, the wealthiest American families frequently use loopholes to avoid
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Robert Goulder of Tax Notes and professor Mitchell Franklin of the Le Moyne College Madden School of Business discuss college sports programs’ not-for-profit status in light of compensation for name, image, and likeness rights. This transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Robert Goulder: Welcome to the latest edition of In the Pages. I’m
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