Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Don Hofstrand Agricultural Economist Co-Director, Ag Marketing Resource Center 641-423-0844.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Don Hofstrand Agricultural Economist Co-Director, Ag Marketing Resource Center 641-423-0844."— Presentation transcript:

1 Don Hofstrand Agricultural Economist www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm Co-Director, Ag Marketing Resource Center www.AgMRC.org dhof@iastate.edu 641-423-0844

2 Critical Success Factors (can you answer YES to these questions?) Are the parents ready for a partner? Is the child committed to farming? Is the business large enough? Do you have a Common Vision of your future together? Can you live and work together? Are the non-farming children supportive?

3 Transfer Plan TestingCommitmentEstablishedWithdrawal Sale, Gift, Inheritance General Manager, Equal Voice Transfer Ownership Transfer Mgmt Transfer Mgmt. Divide Income Transfer Stages Wage, Contributions, 50-50 Division, Lease

4 Business Arrangements Transfer Stages TestingCommitmentEstablishedWithdrawal WageLease Wage & Incentive Farm or Enterprise Operating Agreement Partnership Corporation Wage & Income Sharing Labor & Machinery Sharing Separate Operations Multi-Person Spin-Off

5 Transfer Period older party younger party time Short Transfer Period

6 Transfer Period Long Transfer Period older party younger party time

7 Two Basic Choices Multi-Person Arrangement Spin-Off Arrangement

8 Multi-Person Approach PC Business P & C Business P C

9 Spin-Off Approach Business C C C P P P

10 Tax Implications of Asset Transfers 1. Federal gift tax, no Iowa gift tax 2. Federal estate tax, Iowa inheritance tax 3. Federal & state income taxes Income Tax 3 Sales TaxesGift Taxes 1Death Taxes 2 Transfer Taxes Transfers SaleGiftInheritance

11 Income Tax Implications Machinery Example $50,000 fair market value $30,000 income tax basis

12 Income Tax Implications Sale – tax paid Seller$50,000 sale value 30,000 basis $20,000 taxable gain* Buyer$50,000 basis *depreciation recapture & capital gains

13 Income Tax Implications Gift – tax postponed Donor$50,000 gift value (gift tax) 0 taxable gain Donee$30,000 basis

14 Income Tax Implications Farmland Example $100,000 fair market value 60,000 income tax basis

15 Income Tax Implications Sale – tax paid Seller$100,000 sale value 60,000 basis $ 40,000 taxable gain Buyer$100,000 basis

16 Income Tax Implications Gift – tax postponed Donor$100,000 value (gift tax) 0 taxable gain Donee$ 60,000 basis

17 Income Tax Implications Inheritance – tax eliminated Decedent$100,000 value (death taxes) 0 taxable gain Recipient$100,000 basis

18 General Considerations Valuation  Appraiser  Dealer  Auctioneer Disposal of machinery not wanted by successor

19 Transferring Ownership (personal property) Sale Leasing Gifting Combinations

20 Outright Sale Simple Tax consequences of seller  Depreciation recapture  Capital gains Cash flow needs of buyer (third party financing) New income tax basis for buyer

21 Installment Sale Payments spread over period of years Spreads buyers cash-flow commitment Tax consequences of seller  Depreciation recapture  Capital gains Seller financed New income tax basis for buyer

22 Piecemeal Sale Spread tax consequences of seller  Depreciation recapture  Capital gains New income tax basis for buyer Spreads buyers cash-flow commitment Flexible—can vary sale amount from year to year May use with a lease If retired and not leasing out unsold machinery, cannot claim depreciation

23 Gift No compensation received by donor (giver) No cash-flow commitment by donee (receiver) Financial needs of donor Equity issue with non-farm heirs Gift tax consequences  $10,000 annual exclusion No income tax consequences of donor Donor’s income tax basis carries over to donee

24 Combination Sale/Gift  Buyer cannot afford to pay full value for assets  Seller cannot afford to give away asset  Better utilization of annual gift tax exclusion  Minimize sellers tax liability Lease/Sale

25 Order of Asset Transfer Operations & Feeder Livestock11 Breeding Livestock22 Machinery33 Buildings & Facilities44 Land55 Asset Younger Party Older Party

26 Decision Making Authority A. General Manager 1. On-going decisions Both parties 2. Major decisions Final authority

27 Decision Making Authority B. Equal Voice 1. Both parties 2. Final authority One party Vote Arbitration

28 Transferring Management Child’s goal = Develop management Parent’s goal = Protect financial interest and desire for control Traditional parent-child roles “Taking Things Easier” Training ground Written arrangement Consistency of goals

29 Tranferring Management 1. Division of Responsibility  Enterprise division  Functional division 2. Management Styles  Analytical vs. interpersonal  Competitor vs. peacemaker 3. Withdrawing from Management

30 Income Sharing Arrangements 1. Contributions approach – share income based on contributions 2. 50/50 approach – pay a return to resources and share residual

31 Contributions Approach ParentChild Resources (Annual value=$100) Resources (Annual value=$50) Joint Operation 67% contributed by parent 33% contributed by child

32 Contributions Approach Gross Income $300 67% to parent = $200 33% to child = $100 Direct Expenses $10067% to parent = $67 33% to child = $33 Net $200Parent = $133 Child = $67

33 50/50 Approach Gross Income$300 Direct Expenses$100 Net Return$200 Parent’s Resources (an. value)$100 Child’s Resources (an. value)$ 50 Net$ 50 ParentChild$ 25 $100$ 50 $125$ 75

34 Business Concept Opportunity Cost Assume I can use a resource in both Enterprise A and B. If I invest in A, the opportunity cost is the income I forgo by not investing in B. If I invest in B, the opportunity cost is the income I forgo by not investing in A.

35 Income Sharing Arrangement What is the annual value (cost) of a resource used in a business venture? Land Comparable cash rent Machinery & Livestock Return on investment Depreciation, etc. Operating Capital Return on investment

36 Contributions Approach Parent Child Total Land$52,000 Machinery24,0006,00030,000 Labor23,00033,00056,000 Management10,000 $109,000 8,000 $47,000 18,000 $156,000 Total Parent’s Share 109,000 156,000 = 70% Child’s Share 47,000 156,000 = 30%

37 Contributions Approach (allocating income) Parent’s Child’s Gross Income $186,200$79,800 Prod. Expenses -65,800 -28,200 Return $120,400 $51,600

38 Contributions Approach (cash flow) Parent’s Child’s Return$120,400$51,600 Land Taxes -8,000 0 Land Debt -35,000 0 Machinery Debt -4,000 -3,000 Net Cash Flow $73,400$48,600

39 50/50 Approach Gross Receipts $266,000 Production Expenses -94,000 Net Return $172,000 Parent’s Land -52,000 Parent’s Machinery -24,000 Child’s Machinery -6,000 Parent’s Labor & Mgmt. -33,000 Child’s Labor & Mgmt. -41,000 Profit $ 16,000

40 50/50 Approach (allocating income) Parent Child Land $52,000$ 0 Machinery 24,000 6,000 Labor 23,000 33,000 Management 10,000 8,000 Profit 8,000 8,000 Total Return $117,000 $55,000

41 50/50 Approach (cash flow) Parent Child Total Return $117,000 $55,000 Land Taxes -8,000 0 Land Debt -35,000 0 Machinery Debt -4,000 -3,000 Net Cash Flow$70,000 $52,000

42 Problem Areas Parent’s Perspective Transfer their dreams Inspection tour Advice on raising children Social life Daughter-in-law Son-in-law

43 Problem Areas Adult Child’s Perspective Accept parent’s lifestyle Marriage spats Confidant Baby sitting Carrying stories

44 Keys to Success Strengthen Family Relationships Improve Communication Skills Recognize Individual Differences Allow for Management Participation Practice Family Decision Making Encourage Diversionary Activities Separate Housing is Required Fit the Agreement to the Situation

45 Keys to Success (continued) Develop a Written Agreement Update the Business Arrangement More than One Child Concerns of Off-Farm Heirs Parents Without an Interested Child

46 For More Information Ag Decision Maker www.extension.iastate.edu/agdm


Download ppt "Don Hofstrand Agricultural Economist Co-Director, Ag Marketing Resource Center 641-423-0844."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google