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48 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
A criterion of tax fairness that people wiht different amounts of wealth or different amounts of income should pay different amounts of taxes. Wealth may include assets and property such as houses, cars, stocks, bonds, savings accounts, or valuables. Income includes wages, rents, interest, profits, or other payments.
Ability to Pay
Ordinary dividends are a corporation's distributions to its shareholders from its earnings and profits.
Dividends
The concept that people in different income groups should pay different amounts of taxes, or different percentages of the incomes as taxes. "unequals should be taxed unequally"
Vertical Equity
A tax that takes a larger percentage of income from low-income groups than from high-income groups
Regressive tax
A system of compliance taht relies on individual citizens to report their income freely and voluntarily, calculate their tax liability correctly, and file a tax return on time.
Voluntary Compliance
Claimed by an employee on Form W-4. An employer uses the number of allowances claimed, together with income earned and martial status to dertermine how much income tax to withhold from wages.
Withholding Allowance
The concert that people int eh same income gropu should pay teh same amount of taxes. "equals should be taxed equally"
Horizontal Equity
Individuals and interest groups expressing and promoting hteir opinions about tax legislation.
informal tax legislation process
taxes collected from employers and employees to finance specific programs; levied on earned income such as wages, salaries, and self-employement earnings
payroll taxes
a refundable creidt for low-income workers with children. This credit may be paid to the worker even if no income tax was withheld from the worker's pay. To receive the earned incomne credit, a taxpayer must file a tax return
Earned income credit
The strict constitutional steps (involving Congress and the President) that a proposed tax must pass through before it becomes law
Formal tax legislation process
a form on which taxpayesr list ("itemize") specific sources of income, or specific expenses for which they claim deductions or credits
Schedule
a tax that takes the same percentage of income from all income groups
Proportional tax
taxes on economic transactions, such as the sale of goods and services. Such taxes can be based on a set percentage of the sales value (ad valorem-sales taxes) or they can be a set amount on physical quantitites ("per unit"- gasoline taxes)
transaction taxes
a tax that takes a larger percentage of income from high-income groups than from low-income groups
Progressive tax
Total income reduced by certain adjustments such as the IRA deduction adn the deduction for alimony paid
Adjusted Gross Income
a criterion of tax fairness that people should pay taxes in rough proportion to the benefits they receive from government goods and services
Benefits received
Taxes levied on businesses by federal, state, or local governments. These may include, in addition to corporate income taxes on earnings and profits, unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation, contributions to social security, and Medicare insurance
Business taxes
A direct reduction of the tax owed. Credits may be allowed for purposes such as child care and the earned income credit for low-income taxpayers.
Credits
A person who relies on someone else for support. A dependent generally may not be the taxpayer or his or her spouse. A taxpayer may claim an exemption for a dependent if the dependency tests are met.
Dependent
A tax that cannot be shifted to others. The federal income tax is a good example of a direct tax
Direct Tax
Includes wages, salaries, tips, and net earnings from self-employement and other income received for personal services
Earned Income
Taxes on the sale or use of specific products or transactions.
Excise Taxes
free from federal income tax withholding requirements by meeting certain income, tax liability, and dependency criteria.
Exempt (From Withholding)
Tax law provides for a set amount wihch taxpayers can claim for themselves, their spouses, and eligible dependents. The total of these amounts is subtracted from adjusted gross income before any tax is computed on teh remaining income
Exempt (from Tax Liability)
To file ments to mail or otherwise convey to a regional IRS service center the appropriate IRS form(s)--the return--on which a taxpayer has entered information about income and tax liability.
File a Return
Based on taxpayer's marital status and other factors, the filing status determines the tax bracket and rate at which income is taxed
Filing Status
A form that helps an employer determine how much to withhold from an employee's paycheck for federal income tax purposes
Form W-4 (Employee's Withholding Allowance Certificate)
Money, goods, and property you received that must be included in taxable income
Gross Income
Taxes on income, both earned and unearned. Income taxes can be levied both on individuals (personal income tax) and businesses (business and corporate income taxes)
Income Taxes
A tax that can be shifted to others. The one who pays the tax to the goverment may be able to shift it to others. Business property taxes are examples of indirect taxes.
Indirect Tax
Income received from savings accounts or from lending money to someone else
Interest Income
A tax based on the amount of taxable income that people receive annually. Taxable income is less than total income because of exemptions and tax deductions
Personal Income Tax
Taxes on property, espeically real estate, and also boats, automobiles (often paid along with license fees), recreational vehicles, and business inventories
Property Taxes
one that cannot be withheld from those who don't pay for it, and oen taht may be "consumed" by one person without reducing the amount of the product available for others. Examples include national defense, street lights, and roads and highways. Public services include welfare programs, law enforcement, monitoring and regulating of trade and the economy, and education
Public Goods and Services
A gov't-designated area (usually in a city) that is declared in need of restoration and revitalization. To encourage restoration, tax reductions may be available.
Redevelopment or enterprise Zone
Taxes on retail products, based on a set percentage of retail cost.
Sales Taxes
An amount, fixed by law and based on filing status and age, which taxpayers may deduct from their adjusted gross income before tax is determined
Standard deduction
Taxes on products imported from foreign countries
Tariff (Duties: Customs Duties or Import Duties)
Amounts based on certain expenditures, taht a taxpayer can deduct from taxes owed.
Tax Credits
A person's or business's expenses that can be deducted in determining taxable income
Tax Deductions
A part of a person's total income on which no tax is imposed
Tax Exemptions
The amount of tax that must be paid. Taxpayers meet (or pay) their federal income tax liability through withholding, estimated tax payments, and payments attached to the tax forms they file with the gov't.
Tax Liability (or Total Tax Bill)
The process that occurs when a tax that has been levied on one person or group is in fact paid by others.
Tax Shift
Money that an employer takes from an employee's paycheck and that is used to pay part or all of the employee's taxes
Tax withholding
THe income on which tax is computed
Taxable income
Required payments of money to gov'ts that are used to provide public goods and services for the benifit of the community as a whole
Taxes
Money that employers withhold from employees' paychecks. This money is deposited for the gov't. It will be credited against the employees' tax liability when they file their returns. Employers withhold money for federal income taxes, federal social security taxes, and state and local income taxes in some states and localities.
Withholding ("Pay-as-you-ear" taxation)