Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Chapter 5 TAXES!

Page 2: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Page 3: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Bell Ringer- 2/23/15

What comes to your mind when you think of the word “TAX” ?

Page 4: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Payroll Taxes

• Placed on income earned by individuals• Largest form of revenue received by

government• Amount taken out of each check varies-

base on a person’s annual earnings• Paid to the government by individual

employees and their employers.– Medicare and Social Security

Page 5: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Income Taxes

• Taxes you pay on most types of income you receive.

• The amount paid by each individual varies based on their income

Page 6: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Payroll Tax vs. Income Tax

• Payroll Tax– Includes FICA taxes and Income Tax– Also includes amount paid by employer

based on employees earnings

• Income Tax– Federal Income tax deducted from paycheck

Page 7: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Pay Stub

Largest Deduction

Social Security

Page 8: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

FICA

• Federal Insurance Contribution Act– Law that requires workers and their

employers to contribute to Social Security and Medicare

– Social Security is a program that helps provide benefits to those who have retired.

– Medicare provides health insurance for seniors over the age of 65 as well as certain people with disabilities

Page 9: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Withholdings

• Money that is withheld from your paycheck

• Enables government to collect taxes at a steady rate (each pay period) instead of at the end of the year

• You pay little tax with each paycheck, so you don’t face a huge tax bill at the end of the year.

Page 10: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Gross Income/Gross Pay

• Amount earned before taxes have been withheld

Page 11: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Net Income/ Net Pay

• Amount you receive after withholdings are subtracted from your gross pay

Page 12: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Paystub Activity

• Pay Stub Activity– Work on Paystub Activity 1 as class– Complete Paystub 2 individually

– Social Security

Page 13: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W-4 Form

• Form filled out when you are first hired at a company

• Provides information your employer needs to determine how much to withhold from your paycheck

• http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/fw4.pdf

Page 14: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Allowances

• A number that reduces the amount of income withheld from your paycheck

• Claiming a lower number on your W-4 form will result in MORE money being withheld from your paycheck… but also may mean you will get back more money at the end of the year.

• The lowest number you can claim is 0• Highest you can go up to is 9… but you

need to show proof to IRS for this..

Page 15: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

IRS

• Federal agency that collects income taxes– Agency in the department of treasury– Headquarters: Washington D.C.

• Each year the IRS calls thousands of taxpayers for an audit – Examination of their tax return

Page 16: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W-4 Simulation

• http://apps.irs.gov/app/understandingTaxes/student/simulations.jsp

Page 17: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Chapter 5.2 File A Tax Return

Page 18: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Bell Ringer- 02/24/15

• How do taxes benefit both you and the government?

• Think about this… Kelly has $12.11 withheld from her paycheck for taxes… if she didn’t have this withheld, how much would she have owed at the end of the year? (hint- there are 52 weeks in a year!)

• $12.11 X 52 weeks= $629.72

Page 19: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Tax Return

• Set of forms a taxpayer uses to calculate their obligations (what they owe/don’t owe)

• This is the only way you can get money back. (Usually during Feb-April)

• You are responsible for information on tax return, if it is incorrect you are liable!

Page 20: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Tax Refund

• If your tax return shows you paid more money in withholdings than you owed, you will receive a refund!

Page 21: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Taxes Owed

• If your tax return shows that your withholdings were not enough to cover the taxes you owe, you must send the remaining amount to the government.

Page 22: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Social Security Number

• Unique number assigned to you by the federal government

• No one else has the same number• The government uses this number

throughout your life to:– Identify you as a taxpayer– Keep track of your earnings and tax records– Pay you social security benefit when you

reach retirement

Page 23: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W-2 Form

• Summary of your earnings and withholdings for the year.

• You will receive a W-2 for each job you held during the year.

• When you file a tax return, you must include your W-2!

Page 24: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W-2 FormEmployer

Employee

Wages/TipsFed. Income

Tax

Page 25: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W2 Form Vs. W4 Form

W-2 W-4Used By: Employer reports wages

earned by employee for the year

Employee to report what they want withheld from their paycheck through selection of marital status and dependents

Information found on form:

Identifies information about the employee, the employer, and wages and deduction breakdowns for the employee for the year.

Name, address, Social Security number---and withholding allowance information.

How often is it filed?

Once a year As many times as the employee would like- Always at beginning of employment

Page 26: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

W2 Form VS. W4 Form

W-2 W-4Who sees the form?

Employer files form with IRS and state taxing authority. Employer also MUST give copies to employee at end of the year.

Stays in hands of the employer- sometimes the IRS may request a copy.

Who is responsible for completing the form?

Employer- gives one copy to IRS and one copy to employee

Employee is responsible for completing it.

Employer is responsible for keeping a copy on hand

Page 27: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

1099 Form

• If you have a savings account or any other investments where you earn money- you will receive a 1099 Form at the end of the year.

• Statement of the interest your bank paid on your savings that year

Page 28: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

1040EZ

• Simplest Tax Return Form• To qualify the following must be true:

– You are single or married filing jointly with spouse– You have no dependents– You and your spouse are under 65 yrs – Neither you nor your spouse is blind– Your taxable income is less than $100,000– You have earned no more than $1,500 in interest– You have no other income besides wages, tips,

scholarships, or unemployment

Page 29: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Dependent

• Dependent– People who are supported financially

• Independent– Someone who is not supported by anyone

else financially

Page 30: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Forms, Forms, FORMS!

W-4 W-2 1099 1040EZ

Determines how much to withhold from your paycheck.

Given by yours employer. Summary of how much money you made at a particular company and how much tax was taken out of your paycheck.

Form you receive at the end of the year that shows if you made money (interest) on an savings accounts.Also can be given if you were paid money (over $600) but not taxed.

Tax form filled out at the end of the year to determine if you get a refund or owe money.

Page 31: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

1040 EZ Scenarios

• Jonathon Jackson is a full time high school student. He has a part time job working at the local grocery store each day after school. Last year Jonathon earned $1,525. He is filling out an early tax return, and he is having his refund deposited directly in his Chase bank account in order to receive it as quickly as possible. His savings account number is 1234567890 and the bank routing number is 787878787. Jonathon’s parents claim him as a dependent on their federal tax return.

• Use the information given in the scenario and Jonathon’s W-2 to complete a 1040EZ form.

• 1040 EZ Form• 2012 Tax Table

Page 32: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Deductions

• Expenses the law allows you to subtract from your adjusted gross income to determine you taxable income

• 4 kinds of deductions:1. Business Deductions

• Traveling, meals, gifts, use of car, health insurance, use of home, education, employee pay, etc.

2.Adjustments• IRS or Alimony payments

– Itemized/ Standard– Exemptions

• You, your spouse, children

Page 33: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Examples Of Itemized Deductions

• Medical/dental expenses• State and local taxes• Property tax• Mortgage interest• Gifts to charity• Losses from theft or property damage• Moving expenses • Investment expenses

You cannot use the 1040EZ

form if you are choosing to itemize your deductions!

Page 34: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Standard Deduction

• Specific dollar amount that you are allowed to subtract from your taxable income. A base amount of income that is not subject to tax and that can be used to reduce a taxpayer's adjusted gross income.

Page 35: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Standard Vs. Itemized Deduction

• Standard– Set dollar amount- $9,500 (2012)

• Itemized– Allows you to list expenses– If your expenses add up to MORE than what

the standard deduction would be, then you should choose to Itemize your deductions

• YOU HAVE TO CHOOSE ONE OR THE OTHER! YOU CANNOT DO BOTH!

Page 36: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Taxable Income

• Income figure used to determine your taxes– Your adjusted gross income minus your

Standard Deduction

Page 37: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

How to fill out a 1040EZ!

Page 38: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Things you will need….

• 1040 EZ Form• W-2 Form

– This is REQUIRED in order to fill out your 1040EZ

• 1099 Form – If you have one!

• Tax Table

Page 39: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 1: Fill In Your Basic Info!

• Name (first and last)• Address• Social Security Number

Page 40: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step #1-4

1. Fill in Total Wages, Salaries, Tips

2. Fill in Taxable Interest Income– From 1099 form (interest from bank account)

3. Fill in Unemployment Compensations• Add them all up and you will get… -

Adjusted Gross Income

Page 41: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 5

• If you are an independent and single you will put $9,500 on line 5

• If you are an independent, you will flip your sheet over to the back and fill in worksheet 5!

Page 42: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 6

• Subtract like 5 FROM line 4• This is your taxable Income!

Page 43: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 7 -Federal Income Tax Withheld

• This will be found on your W-2

Page 44: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step #8 Earned Income Credit

• Workers with low incomes will qualify

• **We will not be spending time on this…

• Leave it blank!

Page 45: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 9- Total Payments & Credit

• Add up the following:– Federal Income Tax Withheld (#7)– Earned Income Credit (#8)

• This will result in the total amount of your taxes that you have ALREADY PAID!

Page 46: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 10- Tax Table

• http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040tt.pdf

• Use the tax table to determine how much tax you can subtract from your total payments and credits

Page 47: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 10 Continued…

Page 48: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Step # 11– Refund?!?!

• If line 9 is larger than line 10, subtract line 10 from line 9.

This is the refund!

$648.00!!

Page 49: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Chapter 5.3Taxes and

Government

Page 50: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Agenda 2/25

• Bell Ringer• Giovanni Scenario• Sarah Marshall Scenario

Page 51: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Sarah earned $45,000 last year. When she calculated her taxable income, she found that she owed the government $12,000 in taxes for the year. Sarah already had $7,000 withheld from her paycheck for federal taxes. She owes the federal government an additional $5,000.

What is her income?

$45,000

What is her tax liability?

$ 12,000

What is her withholding tax?

$7,000

What is her tax due?

$5,000

 

Bell Ringer- 02/25/15

Page 52: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Sources Of Government Revenue

• 20% of ALL income goes to Federal Gov’t– 39% accounts from income tax– 32% is from Social Security and Medicare– 13% corporate taxes– 7% is other taxes and fees

Page 53: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Sources of Government Income

Page 54: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Contributions

• Social Security– Wages are taxed at a rate of 6.2%– Collected on gross income

• Medicare– Wages are taxes at a rate of 1.45%

• The total most people pay for SS and Medicare is 7.65% of gross income

Page 55: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Employer Contribution

• For each dollar you earn, your employer will pay 15.3 cents to the government for social security and Medicare taxes.

Page 56: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Principles Of Taxation

• Law that states every taxpayer should be treated equally

• This does NOT mean all taxpayers should pay the same amount.

• This law states that some people should pay MORE than others.

Page 57: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Benefit Principle

• States that those who use a good or service provided by the government should pay for it.– Example- Toll Roads

• Those who drive on the road pays tolls.

Page 58: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Ability To Pay Principle

• Those who have larger incomes should pay a larger share of what they receive.– Example: Federal Income Tax

Page 59: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Taxes and Income- 3 ways

• Progressive Tax• Regressive Tax• Proportional Tax

Page 60: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Progressive Tax

• Takes a larger share of income as income grows– Federal income tax- The more you MAKE

the more you PAY

Page 61: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Regressive Tax

• Takes a smaller portion of income as income grows– Sales tax– Lauren makes $16,000/ year– Sal makes $45,000/ year– They both buy a car for $10,000 and have to

pay 8% ($800) in sales tax.– $800 It is 5% of Laurens income but only

1.8% of Sal’s income

Page 62: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Proportional Tax

• Takes the same share of ALL incomes.• This would occur if people were ALL

taxed for example 10% of their income for something.

• This does not exist in our economy.

Page 63: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

How Taxes Are Collected

• Direct Tax– Paid directly to government– Ex: Income and Property Tax

• Indirect Tax– Included in cost of goods and services– Part of rent is used for landlord to pay

property tax• Pay-As-You-Earn Taxes

– Paid as you earn income– Federal Withholding Tax

Page 64: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Types of Taxes

• Income Taxes• Sales Tax• Property Tax• Excise Tax• Estate and Gift Tax• Business and License Tax

Page 65: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Types Of Taxes

• Income taxes– Withheld from paycheck– Ex. Federal, state, local taxes– Illinois State - 5.0%– Local taxes ~ 1-2%

• Sales Taxes– Taxes added to price of goods and services– Some states don’t have sales tax but they

pay more money in property or income tax to off set what they lose in state tax.

Page 66: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Types Of Taxes

• Property Tax– Taxes on the value of real property– Added to home or loan payments

• Excise Tax– Collected on the sale of specific goods and

services such as tobacco, gasoline, and alcoholic beverages

– Unlike sales tax, excise tax is included in the price charged to customers.

– Ex, when you pay for gas- the price includes both federal and state excise tax.

Page 67: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Types Of Taxes

• Estate Tax– Property tax given to someone legally

entitled to an estate when a person dies.• Gift Tax

– Taxes the giver of gifts may pay– Federal law allows people to make some

gifts that are not taxes– Maximum value of gifts that were not taxed

was $12,000 in 2008.

Page 68: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Types Of Taxes

• Business or license tax– Paid to receive licensing or a permit to

operate a type of business– Ex. To be a teacher you have to take

certification test which you pay for.

Page 69: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Customs Duties and Tariffs

• Customs Duties or Tariffs– Controls the flow of products imported into

the united states– This results in items from abroad being sold

at higher prices than they otherwise would be.

Page 70: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Skittles Activity

• All students will be given a bag of Skittles• DON’T EAT THEM!• Count your Skittles• Fill out the Worksheet that goes along

with this activity!

Page 71: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Chapter 5.4Government

Spending

Page 72: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Bell Ringer- 2/24 You Cut The Taxes!

• Assume you are a member of congress. You have been instructed by your constituents to cut taxes. In order to cut taxes, you must cut programs.

• Read the descriptions of each program and decide with three programs you will want to keep and which three you want to cut and explain why…

Page 73: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Power To Influence

• Government use tax to do 2 things– Generate Revenue– Influence consumer buying decisions

• Example: “Sin Tax”• The government taxes certain products to

discourage their use because they are harmful to our bodies even though they are legal

• Millions of Americans buy and use these products anyway

• The government taxes these products higher because it is a choice to use them- not everyone uses them.

Page 74: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Government Spending

• The federal government spends $2.65 trillion each year– Roughly $15,000 for every person who lives

in the United States• Most of the government’s spending pays

for goods and services that benefit all Americans.– Public Goods: Roads, schools, national

defense, and services of various regulatory agencies.

Page 75: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Taxes Fund Public Goods and Services

National Defense

State and Local Police

Net Interest on Debt

Social Security, Medicare, and Retirement

Public Education

Foods Stamps and Unemployment

(Social Programs)

23%

36%

19%

12%2%

8%

Page 76: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Goods and Services State and Local Government Provide…

• Building and maintaining roads• Operating police and fire protection system• Maintaining a criminal justice system• Building and staffing schools• Building and operating state colleges and

universities• Supporting medical facilities• Constructing and operating sewage treatment

plants• Operating unemployment compensation

programs

Page 77: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

State and Local Gov’t Regulations

• Rules are written into laws enforced by state and local government– Example:

• In order to drive, you must have a drivers license• To build a house you must have a permit

• These create order and safety in the state and local communities

Page 78: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

BINGO!• Allowance• Business or license Tax• Custom duty or tariff• Dependent• Deduction• Estate tax• Excise tax• FICA• 1040EZ Form• 1099 Form• W-2 Form• W-4 Form

• Gross Income• Income Tax• IRS• Gift Tax• Net income• Payroll tax• Property Tax• Public Good• Sales Tax• Social Security Number • Tax Return• Taxable Income• Withholding

Page 79: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

03/04/13

• Life-Smart Project– Complete Tax Page 3

• Review Chapter 5– Review Worksheet– Look over 1040EZ Scenarios– TEST TOMORROW!

Page 80: Chapter 5 TAXES!. Ch. 5.1: Taxes and Your Paycheck?

Question 21-24- Word Bank

• A. Tax Return• B. Refund• C. Taxable Income• D. Exemption• E. Deduction• AB. Owe• AC. Adjusted Gross Income• AD. Withholding


Recommended