Federal Income Taxation

Course Information

Registration Information

Meeting Times

Day Time Location
MON, TUE, WED, THU 11:30 am - 12:20 pm TNH 2.140

Evaluation Method

Type Date Time Location
Final exam May 2, 2008 1:30 pm A-Z in 2.138

Description

Three, four, or five hours credit, depending on instructor. No prerequisites. Federal Income Tax (FIT) presents an overview of the federal income tax, mostly as it applies to individuals. The aim of the course is to present the fundamental principles underlying the federal income tax and to convey the style and flavor of tax thinking. As a survey, FIT will touch on all the major issues, such as what is gross income, what expenditures are deductible, what is the appropriate taxable unit, what is the function of "basis," and what is the appropriate timing of income and deductions. Specific topics that will be covered in reasonable depth include: employee fringe benefits, business deductions (e.g., travel, entertainment, and education), hobby losses, personal deductions (e.g., medical expenses and charitable contributions), the exclusions for gifts, bequests, life insurance proceeds, and recoveries for personal injuries, income attribution, the taxation of the family (including divorce taxation), the tax treatment of loans, capital expenditures, methods of capital recovery (e.g., installment and carve-out sales and depreciation methods), capital gains and losses, tax-free exchanges and rollovers, the tax treatment of inventories, tax accounting (e.g., the cash and accrual methods), employee benefits, leasing and licensing transactions, tax shelters, the at- risk rules, the "tax benefit" rule, the passive loss rules, original issue discount and imputed interest, and the alternative minimum tax. Given the rapid evolution of tax law, many issues will be approached from a policy perspective. Some emphasis will be given to using the Internal Revenue Code and Regulations. Depending on the instructor, other approaches may be employed, such as the relation of tax to accounting, economics, and finance, the planning of transactions, and the practice of tax law. Prior background in accounting, economics, math, or finance is not needed or expected.