1 Module 5, Part 2: Deferred Income Taxes. 2 IT Expense and Deferred Income Taxes Financial versus tax accounting – Financial income based on GAAP. –

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES
Advertisements

McGraw-Hill /Irwin© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES Chapter 16.
1 © 1999 by Robert F. Halsey Accounting for Income Taxes Items to be covered ¶Deferred taxes l Temporary vs. permanent differences l deferred tax liabilities.
Review of the Accounting Process
Review of the Accounting Process
Intermediate Accounting,17E
C Chapter 13 Corporations: Income and Taxes, Stockholders’ Equity and Investments in Stocks.
COPYRIGHT © 2007 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 16 Accounting for Income Taxes.
Chapter 19: Accounting for Income Taxes
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Accounting for Income Taxes 16.
Deferred Taxes. Definitions Definitions Income taxes payable (current taxes payable) – amount due for taxes in the current year as a result of filing.
Accounting and Reporting Income Taxes Pertemuan 17 dan 18 Matakuliah: F0054/Akuntansi Keuangan 2 Tahun : 2007.
Accounting for Income Taxes Sid Glandon, DBA, CPA Assistant Professor of Accounting The University of Texas at El Paso.
Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Slide 16-1 Chapter Sixteen Accounting for Income Taxes.
Module 5, Part 2: Deferred Income Taxes 1. 2 IT Expense and Deferred Income Taxes Financial versus tax accounting – Financial income based on GAAP. –
COPYRIGHT © 2007 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
Accounting for Income Taxes
1 Deferred Tax Examples Nice to have on paper as we work problems during class Acct 414.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Accounting for Income Taxes 16.
1 Income Taxes chapter chapter Understand the concept of deferred taxes and the distinction between permanent and temporary differences. 2. Compute.
Chapter 14 Income Taxes Chapter 14 Income Taxes Mark Higgins.
Accounting for Income Taxes
COMPUTING INCOME TAX EXPENSE A SIX STEP PROGRAM. STEP 1 IDENTIFY TEMPORARY DIFFERENCES IDENTIFY PERMANENT DIFFERENCES.
Accounting for Income Taxes
MANAGEMENT DECISIONS AND FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING REPORTS Baginski & Hassell.
Slide C3-1 Assignments For Next Class: Read Chapter 3, pages
ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2007 All rights reserved. Clinic 6-1 Accounting Clinic VI.
McGraw-Hill /Irwin© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES Chapter 16.
1 Income Taxes. 2  Understand the concept of deferred taxes and the distinction between permanent and temporary differences.  Compute the amount of.
Adjustments, Financial Statements, and the Quality of Earnings Chapter 4 McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Chapter 4 Completing the Accounting Cycle
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A.,
Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A.,
ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES Chapter 16 © 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
1 Accounting for Income Taxes. 2 After studying this, you should be able to: Identify differences between pretax financial income and taxable income.
13-1 Preview of Chapter 13 Financial and Managerial Accounting Weygandt Kimmel Kieso.
PowerPoint Authors: Susan Coomer Galbreath, Ph.D., CPA Charles W. Caldwell, D.B.A., CMA Jon A. Booker, Ph.D., CPA, CIA Cynthia J. Rooney, Ph.D., CPA Copyright.
Acct Chapter 191 Deferred Taxes - What Are They? The Federal tax code is designed to collect revenue and influence behavior, not principally to measure.
Accounting Boot Camp Module 10 Statement of Cash Flows 1.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 1-1 CHAPTER 7 Accounting for and Presentation of Liabilities McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Accounting for Income Taxes
Income Tax Reporting Revsine/Collins/Johnson/Mittelstaedt: Chapter 13 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights.
Accounting Clinic VI McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Accounting for Income Taxes Sid Glandon, DBA, CPA Assistant Professor of Accounting The University of Texas at El Paso.
1 Accounting for Income Taxes C hapter 18 An electronic presentation by Douglas Cloud Pepperdine University An electronic presentation by Douglas Cloud.
On the next slide, Revenue of $100,000 consists of municipal bond interest of $10,000 and service revenue of $90, What is taxable income? 2. What.
Chapter 19-1 Accounting for Income Taxes Chapter19 Intermediate Accounting 12th Edition Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield Prepared by Coby Harmon, University.
1. 2 Chapter 14: Statement of Cash Flows Required for financial statements by SFAS 95 (1987). Primary purpose is to provide relevant information about.
1 Appendix B: Statement of Cash Flows. 2 General Information on SCF Required for financial statements by SFAS 95 (1987). Primary purpose is to provide.
CHAPTER 7 ACCOUNTING FOR AND PRESENTATION OF LIABILITIES McGraw-Hill/Irwin©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002.
CHAPTER 14 Statement of Cash Flows. The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2008McGraw-Hill/Irwin 14-2 Reporting Format for the Statement of Cash Flows The Statement.
Accounting for Income Taxes C hapter 19 COPYRIGHT © 2010 South-Western/Cengage Learning Intermediate Accounting 11th edition Nikolai Bazley Jones An electronic.
F Designed to give you the knowledge and application of: Section C: Financial Statements C1. Statements of cash flows C2. Tangible non-current.
Accounting for Income Taxes C hapter 19 An electronic presentation by Norman Sunderman Angelo State University An electronic presentation by Norman Sunderman.
Accounting for Income Taxes
Chapter 2 Asset and Liability Valuations and Income Recognition.
Appendix B: Statement of Cash Flows
PreviewofCHAPTER17.
Accounting for and Presentation of Liabilities
Accounting Clinic VI.
Chapter 10: Current Liabilities and Contingencies
Chapter 20: Accounting for Income Taxes
Accounting for Income Taxes
Accounting for Income Taxes
Chapter 20: Accounting for Income Taxes
Statement of Cash Flows
Stice | Stice | Skousen Statement of Cash Flows Revisited
Presentation transcript:

1 Module 5, Part 2: Deferred Income Taxes

2 IT Expense and Deferred Income Taxes Financial versus tax accounting – Financial income based on GAAP. – Taxable income based on tax laws. – The difference between financial income and taxable income is generally leads to something called “deferred income taxes. Historical treatment of income taxes – Recognize income tax expense based on financial income. – Recognize income tax payable based on taxable income. – The difference is a “plug,” and represents the timing difference between taxable and financial income.

3 Problems with Historical Treatment Journal entry for historical treatment: I. T. Expensexxnet income x % DIT(debit or credit)xx / xxplug I. T. Payablexxtax income x % Problems: – after many years, the difference, primarily due to things like depreciation, had become one of the larger liabilities on the balance sheet. – in some cases, the liability was greater than anything else in the balance sheet. Solution (in SFAS 109): prepare a detailed schedule to calculate the amount for IT Payable and DIT, and let IT Expense be the plug.

4 SFAS 109 Journal entry for SFAS 109: I. T. Expensexxplug DITxx / xxschedule I. T. Payablexxschedule Before developing the schedule, we first need to discuss what items need to go into the schedule. – Permanent differences (like income on municipal bonds) are excluded from the DIT schedule. – Only temporary differences are included in the schedule. Temporary differences fall into two categories: – those differences that lead to lower taxable income at the time of origination (future taxable). – those differences that lead to higher taxable income at the time of origination (future deductible).

5 SFAS Future Taxable Items Future taxable (FT) items are amounts that are taxable in the future, because they are not taxable now. They represent the difference between financial and taxable income in the year of origination. They include: – Revenues or gains that are recognized in taxable income after they are recognized in financial income (such as income from equity investments in excess of dividends received). – Expenses or losses that are recognized in taxable income before they are recognized in financial income (such as MACRS depreciation used for taxable income, while straight-line depreciation used for financial income.)

6 SFAS Future Deductible Items Future deductible (FD) items are amounts that lead to more tax now, but less tax in the future They represent the difference between financial and taxable income in the year of origination. They include: – Revenues or gains that are recognized in taxable income before they are recognized in financial income (such as cash received in advance for future services: unearned revenues). – Expenses or losses that are recognized in taxable income after they are recognized in financial income (this includes most estimates, such as bad debt expense, warranty expense loss contingencies, and pension expense in excess of cash paid).

7 SFAS Scheduling DIT We will have only 2 columns for our schedule: – Current IT Payable – Deferred Income Taxes However, most companies report the net current deferred tax asset or liability, and the net noncurrent deferred tax asset or liability. In the year of origination (or the first year of the difference), the amounts should total across any line to -0-. In the year of origination, the adjustment in the IT Payable column is to convert financial income to taxable income.

8 Illustration of Schedule in First Year Current year Future years I. T. Payable Deferred I.T. Pretax financial income $ xx Future deductible: Rev: customer advances +- Exp: estimated expenses +- Future taxable: Rev: excess equity income-+ Exp: excess MACRS depr.-+ Taxable income $ xx Note: if you schedule -1,000 for excess MACRS for the IT Payable column, then you would schedule +1,000 in the DIT column. Any originating amounts must reverse out in future periods in order to be considered for DIT. Effect in schedule is shown on the next slide.

9 Illustration of Schedule in First Year Assume a 30% tax rate for current and future years. Current year Future years I. T. Payable Deferred I.T. Pretax financial income $100,000 Future taxable: Exp: excess MACRS depr. (1,000)1,000 Taxable income Deferred amount Tax rate Income tax payable Deferred tax liability Journal entry (income tax expense is the plug):