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Finance Concepts Videos 809 videos

Finance: What's the Difference Between Federal and State Taxes?
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Finance: What Rights Does a Public Stockholder Have?
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Finance: What is a Tax Deduction? 102 Views


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Description:

What is a tax deduction? Tax deductions decrease the amount of taxable income reported so that less tax is owed. For everyday civilians, these deductions come from things like owning a house, being married, having kids, etc.

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Transcript

00:00

Finance allah shmoop shmoop What is a tax deduction Uh

00:06

taxes Love him Hate him You can't leave him but

00:10

you can lower them legally by being you know thoughtful

00:13

about how you spend your earnings All right How do

00:16

we do this Well let's start with the largest tax

00:18

deduction in america the home mortgage And you you the

00:23

dentist who makes one hundred fifty grand a year for

00:26

putting your fingers in wet mouth Well remember that for

00:29

individuals versus corporations we pay a graduated or quote progressive

00:35

unquote tax rate Like almost nothing On the first fifteen

00:39

grand we earned on about ten percent from fifteen to

00:42

thirty grand And then about twenty percent from thirty to

00:44

sixty grand And so on That's progressive So on the

00:47

last twenty grand of earnings you make well you might

00:50

pay say forty percent in taxes and yeah we know

00:53

the numbers own exact We're just illustrating a point Here

00:56

you have a mortgage of three hundred thousand dollars on

00:58

a home you bought for four hundred thousand dollars right

01:01

So you put a hundred grand down and borrow three

01:03

hundred The mortgage costs you six percent per year in

01:06

interest or eighteen thousand dollars to rent that three hundred

01:09

thousand before you owned the home The irs thought of

01:13

you as one hundred fifty grand a year earner but

01:16

one hundred percent of the interest on the home is

01:19

fully tax deductible So what about that last twenty grand

01:23

iii The money you earn from one hundred thirty k

01:26

to one hundred fifty k Well as faras the irs

01:29

is concerned now that you have a home you get

01:31

taxed as if you earned just one hundred thirty two

01:35

grand not one hundred fifty k actually earned Why Because

01:39

that eighteen thousand dollars in interest comes right off the

01:43

top of your earnings See there's the math right there

01:46

one hundred fifty minutes eighteen hundred thirty two taxable earnings

01:48

it's as if you didn't earn that money ever can't

01:55

all right well if you'd had no deductions on that

01:57

last twenty thousand dollars of earnings you'd have paid forty

02:00

percent or eight thousand dollars in taxes But now on

02:04

that last twenty thousand dollars thanks to your mortgage deduction

02:07

well you only have taxable income of two thousand dollars

02:11

And yes you pay forty percent on that two thousand

02:14

Or eight hundred bucks And you mumbled thank you government

02:17

for largely splitting the cost of my mortgage with me

02:20

The american dream is alive and well that's what you

02:23

say Okay And thank you jay There are other deductions

02:26

beyond home mortgages of course but well you get the

02:29

gist here of how they work from a taxpayer's perspective

02:33

Deductions like those from your home mortgages are a good

02:36

thing Common personal deductions also include things like prepaid healthcare

02:41

costs and the cost of feeding quote dependent unquote children

02:45

Aii those noisy things sleeping in your spare bedrooms until

02:49

they're eighteen Okay so those air personal deductions things that

02:52

individual citizens take But what if you're a corporation Well

02:56

in a way it's kind of easier Think of most

02:58

corporations is having a flat thirty percent tax from the

03:01

first dollar they make just keep things simple Participation trophy

03:04

company in kameda one hundred million dollars last year and

03:08

paid thirty million in taxes They netted seventy million after

03:12

tax The company really needs a new trophy smelting machine

03:16

because with so much demand for participation trophies of late

03:20

while the old one is running dullah with mediocrity the

03:24

company spends forty million box on the new machine knowing

03:27

that it will be worthless in ten years either because

03:30

it wears out or because the country gets riel or

03:33

you know simply remembers to you know have a nice

03:35

day participation trophy land Welcome to it They'd appreciate forty

03:39

million dollars in equal parts of four million box each

03:42

year over ten years so that in the next year

03:45

when they again or in one hundred million dollars well

03:47

they now get to deduct four million bucks and appreciation

03:51

from their smelting machine against their hundred million dollars in

03:55

earnings So again as faras the irs is concerned they

03:58

didn't really earn one hundred million dollars even though they

04:00

did They earned quote on ly unquote ninety six million

04:04

and yes they still pay their thirty percent tax Only

04:07

now instead of paying it on a hundred million bucks

04:09

it's paid on ninety six million of earnings or point

04:13

three times ninety six or twenty eight point eight million

04:17

in taxes they did Abducted from their taxes The four

04:21

million box expected value decline from their smelting machine Right

04:25

It goes down four million a year in value from

04:27

the forty they paid They received essentially a credit on

04:30

their taxes of one point two million dollars So instead

04:34

of that year's depreciation costing the company four million bucks

04:38

well it really cost them more like two point eight

04:41

million If you ignore a bunch of other things like

04:42

the original capital cost of the machine what else they

04:45

might have done with that money oven you know via

04:48

smelting machine Think think Corporate jet Yeah those g sixes 00:04:52.774 --> [endTime] are surprisingly tasteful

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