In: Accounting
Mackenzie is considering conducting her business, Mac561, as either a single-member LLC or an S corporation. Assume her marginal ordinary income tax rate is 37 percent, her marginal FICA rate on employee compensation is 1.45 percent, her marginal self-employment tax rate is 2.9 percent, and any employee compensation or self-employment income she receives is subject to the 0.9 percent additional Medicare tax. Also assume Mac561 generated $200,000 of business income before considering the deduction for compensation Mac561 pays to Mackenzie and Mackenzie can claim the qualified business income deduction on Mac561’s business income. Determine Mackenzie’s after-tax cash flow from the entity’s business income and any compensation she receives from the business under the following assumptions: (Round intermediate calculations and your final answers to the nearest whole dollar.)
c. Mackenzie conducted Mac561 as an S corporation and she received a salary of $20,000. All business income allocated to her is also distributed to her.
d-1. Which entity/compensation combination generated the most after-tax cash flow for Mackenzie?
d-2. What are the primary contributing factors
favoring this combination? (You may select more than one
answer. Single click the box with the question mark to produce a
check mark for a correct answers and double click the box with the
question mark to empty the box for a wrong answers. Any boxes left
with a question mark will be automatically graded as
incorrect.)
c)
Amount |
Description |
|
(1) Business income before comp. |
$200,000 |
|
(2) Salary |
(20,000) |
|
(3) FICA deduction |
(290) |
(2) × .0145 employer’s portion |
(4) Business income allocation and distribution to owner |
179,710 |
(1) + (2) + (3) |
(5) QBI deduction |
(35,942) |
(4) × 20% |
(6) Net taxable business income |
143,768 |
(4) + (5) |
(7) Income tax on net business income |
(53,194) |
(6) × .37 |
(8) Salary received |
20,000 |
(2) |
(9) Income tax on salary |
(7,400) |
(8) × .37 |
(10) Additional Medicare tax on salary |
(180) |
(8) × .009 |
(11) FICA tax paid |
(290) |
(2) × .0145 employee’s portion |
After-tax cash flow |
$138,646 |
(4) + (7) + (8) + (9) + (10) + (11) |
d)
The S corporation with the low ($20,000) salary was the best. The factors favoring this were (1) a small amount of payroll tax on the low salary (2) a relatively large QBI deduction because of the low salary, and (3) none of the relatively large business income allocation was subject to FICA or self-employment tax. The IRS could potentially evaluate the salary Mackenzie performed and determine that it was unreasonably low. If so, the IRS could possibly reclassify some of the business income as salary. The single member LLC was a close second because it provided for a larger QBI deduction. However, this advantage was offset by the fact that the entire income was subject to self-employment tax (92.35 percent of it, anyway).