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taxes, and charitable contributions (the exemption phase-out and deduction limitation are colloquially known
as “PEP and Pease”). These changes, coupled with the new 3.8% tax on net investment income (see
below), may mean an unhappy surprise for many taxpayers on April 15, 2014, when they pay their 2013
income tax liability. On the transfer tax front, ATRA also made permanent the $5 million basic exclusion
against the gift and estate tax, along with “portability,” which effectively allows a surviving spouse to “inherit”
the deceased spouse’s unused exclusion. (The exclusion has been indexed for inflation since 2012, and in
2014, will increase to $5.34 million, the same amount as the generation-skipping transfer tax exemption).
Finally, ATRA raised the top transfer tax rate from 35% to 40%.
3.8% tax on net investment income. What has come to be known as the “Affordable Care Act” (or ACA,
sometimes referred to as “Obamacare”) was enacted in two parts in March 2010: the “Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act” (Pub. L. 111-148), and “The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010”
(Pub. L. 111-152). ACA is a seismic shift in health care insurance and is beginning to be phased in (see
below). It has also brought a number of new taxes, including the 3.8% tax on “net investment income,”
which took effect in 2013. Such income includes interest, dividends, capital gains, royalties and rents; the
3.8% tax on these items can apply if a taxpayer’s “modified adjusted gross income” (adjusted gross income
plus otherwise excluded foreign income) exceeds certain amounts that are not indexed for inflation:
$250,000 (married filing jointly), $200,000 (single taxpayers) and $125,000 (married filing separately).
The extensive guidance the IRS has issued on this 3.8% tax is indicative of its complexity. To illustrate, in
November 2012, the IRS issued over 150 pages of proposed regulations on the tax (REG-130507-11), and
on November 27, 2013, the IRS issued over 300 pages of material: final regulations (T.D. 9644, effective
December 2, 2013), along with some new proposed regulations (REG-130843-13) that address areas where
guidance had been requested, or that had seemed unduly burdensome to commentators (such as how to
calculate gain or loss when disposing of certain partnership or S Corporation property). Additional areas, the
IRS has indicated, are reserved for future guidance...and then there are the various questions and answers
the Service has issued, along with the explanations it has added to multiple publications that are designed
for the general public. Put simply, this is a lot of material for a statute that is barely two pages long!
With the advent of these final regs, the IRS presumably will soon issue instructions for the new Form 8960,
where taxpayers will report the 3.8% tax (a draft form was issued this August, but its frequent injunction to
“see instructions” meant that taxpayers were still in the dark about how to calculate the tax). Note that if the
“kiddie tax” applies to a child’s “unearned income” AND the parent elects to report this income as his own, by
filing Form 8814, this income will also be part of the parent’s “net investment income” for purposes of the
3.8% tax. (The kiddie tax effectively taxes a child’s unearned income in excess of $2,000 (the 2013 and
2014 thresholds) at the parent's highest rate.)
Windsor and same-sex marriage. The Supreme Court decided United States v. Windsor on June 26,
2013, and held that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) was unconstitutional because it
defined “marriage” as only between a man and a woman. On August 29", Treasury and the IRS issued
guidance explaining that, effective September 16, 2013, same-sex married couples are now treated as
married for ail federal tax purposes, regardless of where they live (see, for example, Revenue Ruling 2013-
17 and various Q&As on the IRS website: irs.gov). Nevertheless, because Section 2 of DOMA still stands,
states are not required to recognize same-sex marriages that were validly celebrated in a different state.
Thus, the state tax treatment of a same-sex married couple may differ from the couple’s federal treatment,
depending on where they live. In other words, complications still abound.
ACA rollout. As mentioned above, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is being phased in, including the rollout
this fall of HealthCare.gov, the government website through which individuals can seek health insurance so
as to satisfy the “individual mandate,” which requires individuals to procure health insurance by January 1,
2014, or face a penalty. As has been widely reported, the website has had numerous problems, and many
individuals who had coverage are now losing it because it apparently doesn't meet ACA’s new minimum
Tax Topics 12/20/13 3
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Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022327.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 4,855 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:47:40.730727 |