Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMervyn Little Modified over 9 years ago
1
Janet Kleffner ACCT 530 Graduate Presentation
2
If you pay management or executives an excessive amount, penalties can be imposed on the board members who approved the compensation. The IRS has established new “safe harbor” provisions which relate to “intermediate sanctions” provisions for governments and not-for-profit organizations.
3
Why should you care? “Intermediate Sanctions” Defined Caracci v. Commissioner (2002). “Reasonable Compensation” ◦ Disclosures ◦ How to Report Violation Consequences Introduction to “Safe Harbor Provisions”
4
Some of you may sit on a Board of Directors for a government or NFP organization Some of you may be managers of a NFP organization or government workers IRC 4958 is one of the most important regulation changes in history for governments and NFP organizations
5
Exemption status revoked Needed a less harsh punishment “Effective January 1, 2010, board members who knowingly and willfully approve excess benefit transactions are joint and severally liable for a 10% tax (limited to $20,000 per transaction).”
6
1996-2002: regulations developed ◦ January 2002: final implementation No applicable to private foundations “Excess-benefit transactions” Penalize members with influence, not organization ◦ Board members ◦ CEO/CFO ◦ Compensated employee
7
First case reported under IRC 4958 Family-owned 3 health care organizations (exempt) Transfer of assets to become for-profit Gain on assets far exceeded liabilities assumed ◦ Classified as “excess benefit transaction” ◦ Unreasonable compensation package Exemption status revoked
8
IRS: “An amount that would be ordinarily paid for like services by like enterprises under like circumstances” Specific factors ◦ IRC 162 standards ◦ Similar positions ◦ Availability of services in the region ◦ Compensation surveys ◦ Offers from other firms for the position
9
Unreasonable compensation=Excess Benefit Transactions (EBT) Based on compensation increases and/or FV of assets transferred Burden of proof ◦ IRS: “willful and flagrant” ◦ Defending parties: “reasonable cause”
10
All compensation and benefits ◦ Automatic EBT if not reported Any penalties must be disclosed ◦ Names and amounts Form 990 –Schedule J ◦ http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f990sj.pdf http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f990sj.pdf
11
Implemented by IRS ◦ Excise taxes ◦ Repayment of EBT ◦ Additional penalties ◦ Interest ◦ Revocation of tax exempt status Compensated Individual ◦ 25% and 200% excise tax Board members ◦ 10% tax (joint and severally liable)
12
Reduces or eliminates the liability of the compensated party ◦ Good faith assumption ◦ Excuses “legitimate and excusable violations” “Rebuttable presumption of reasonableness” 3 steps ◦ Review and approval of compensation by independent firm ◦ Decisions based on factors (similar positions, firms) ◦ Documentation of deliberations, determination process, and all decisions
13
Romano, Dan, Eric Gonzaga, and Ken Cameron. "Not for Profit Executive Compensation Trends." Lecture. Grant Thornton LLP, 2010. Web. 6 Dec. 2010. "Safe Harbor." Wikipedia.com. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., 30 Nov. 2010. Web. 7 Nov. 2010.. Bright, Lauren M. "Understanding Intermediate Sanction Rules." Ed. Jerald A. Jacobs. ASAE (2010). Web. 7 Dec. 2010.. United Sates. Internal Revenue Service. U.S. Department of Revenue. By Lawrence M. Brauer and Leonard J. Henzke. Intermediate Sanctions (IRC 4958) Update. Internal Revenue Service, 2003. Web. 7 Dec. 2010..
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.