logo
#

Latest news with #Taxes

Top News Headlines In Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand & Vietnam: May 21, 2025
Top News Headlines In Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand & Vietnam: May 21, 2025

Barnama

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Barnama

Top News Headlines In Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand & Vietnam: May 21, 2025

Twenty-seven years after Indonesia emerged from the shadow of authoritarian rule, the nation now stands at a crossroads, as it reaches what some pro-democracy advocates describe as 'the end of political reform', marked by the dismantling of democratic institutions and the return of authoritarian tendencies. President Prabowo Subianto has appointed two new top officials to lead tax and customs agencies amid a sharp decline in state revenue during the first four months of 2025. Bimo Wijayanto, a senior bureaucrat at the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, will replace Suryo Utomo as Director General of Taxes. Meanwhile, Lieutenant General Djaka Budi Utama, currently serving as secretary of the State Intelligence Agency (BIN), has been tapped to lead the Directorate General of Customs and Excise, replacing Askolani. The Health Ministry on Monday launched vaccination education tools based on the country's 'Pink Book' to raise awareness of immunisation and improve understanding of vaccines among low-literacy and diverse ethnic communities. 2. NEW LAO-THAI BRIDGE TO RAISE TRADE -- VIENTIANE TIMES A 1,350-metre bridge linking Bolikhamxay province in Laos and Bueng Kan province in Thailand across the Mekong River will be opened at the end of 2025. It will boost travel and deepen trade between the two neighbours in the Greater Mekong Subregion. MYANMAR 1. SAC READY TO TRANSFER POWER TO NEW GOVERNMENT -- THE GLOBAL NEW LIGHT OF MYANMAR State Administration Council (SAC) Chairman Senior General Min Aung Hlaing said the current government will hand over the state responsibilities to the party that wins the elections. The administration is planning to hold a nationwide elections later this year. SINGAPORE 1. SQ321 INCIDENT: ONE YEAR ON, PASSENGERS RECALL HOW EXTREME TURBULENCE UPENDED THEIR LIVES -- THE STRAITS TIMES It has been six months since giving birth to her second child in November 2024, but Ms Saw Rong still cannot carry the baby girl. 2. SINGAPORE CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE CEASEFIRE, RESUMPTION OF AID AS GAZA VIOLENCE ESCALATES -- CNA Singapore on Tuesday (May 20) called for an immediate ceasefire and the resumption of humanitarian aid into Gaza, as Israel intensified attacks across the territory. THAILAND 1. THAI BUSINESS LEADERS URGE POLITICAL STABILITY AND STRATEGIC INVESTMENTS TO REVIVE ECONOMY -- THE NATION The Thai business sector is increasingly concerned about the nation's political instability, fearing it could erode investor confidence and further weaken the already fragile economy. 2. PM BACKS HOLD ON HANDOUT -- BANGKOK POST Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra has defended the government's decision to postpone the third phase of the 10,000-baht handout programme, saying uncontrollable circumstances made it impossible to implement it. VIETNAM 1. MACRON'S VIETNAM VISIT WILL ELEVATE BILATERAL TIES -- VIETNAM NEWS French President Emmanuel Macron and his spouse will visit Vietnam from May 25-27 which is expected to further deepen their 50-year-old bilateral ties. Macron is visiting on the invitation of State President Luong Cuong. 2. UNIFORM E-TICKETING SYSTEM TO IMPROVE PUBLIC TRANSPORT -- VIETNAMPLUS Hanoi will implement an integrated e-ticket system on September 2 that will eliminate the current fragmented automated ticketing system across various transport models. This will promote non-cash transactions, transparent and friendly public transport. -- BERNAMA BERNAMA provides up-to-date authentic and comprehensive news and information which are disseminated via BERNAMA Wires; BERNAMA TV on Astro 502, unifi TV 631 and MYTV 121 channels and BERNAMA Radio on FM93.9 (Klang Valley), FM107.5 (Johor Bahru), FM107.9 (Kota Kinabalu) and FM100.9 (Kuching) frequencies. Follow us on social media : Facebook : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatv, @bernamaradio Twitter : @ @BernamaTV, @bernamaradio Instagram : @bernamaofficial, @bernamatvofficial, @bernamaradioofficial TikTok : @bernamaofficial

Plan Your 2025 QCDs And RMDs Now
Plan Your 2025 QCDs And RMDs Now

Forbes

time27-03-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Plan Your 2025 QCDs And RMDs Now

The early months of the year are important for taxpayers ages 70½ and older who have traditional IRAs. The right plan developed early in the year can reduce taxes on required minimum distributions this year and for years to come. Not planning, or waiting until later in the year, can mean lost opportunities and routinely costs taxpayers a bundle. Traditional IRA owners ages 70½ and older have available to them one of the most powerful tax and charitable-giving tools, the qualified charitable distribution. RMDs bedevil many traditional IRA owners as they age. The rules force them to take distributions from their IRAs whether they need the money or not. A higher percentage of the IRA must be distributed each year. The distributions are taxable except to the extent nondeductible contributions were made to the IRA. The distributions increase adjusted gross income and so can trigger or increase the Stealth Taxes, such as the Medicare premium surtax, inclusion of Social Security benefits in gross income, the 3.8% net investment income tax, and more. For IRA owners who have other resources to pay most of their retirement expenses, the RMDs increase lifetime income taxes. Other IRA owners need their RMDs to pay living expenses, but they also make charitable contributions from their other funds. Both groups of IRA owners would increase after-tax income by incorporating QCDs in their annual financial plans. A QCD converts taxable IRA distributions into tax-free distributions and counts toward the year's RMD. The QCD often is a smarter way to give than writing a check, even if the contribution by check is fully deductible. The QCD is the most tax-wise way to make charitable contributions, with the possible exception in some situations of donating highly-appreciated investment assets. The QCD was added to the tax code as a temporary tax break in 2006, but a 2015 law made it a permanent fixture. You could take a distribution from the IRA and give it to charity. Or you could have the IRA custodian transfer money directly to charity. In either case, the non-QCD distribution is included in gross income and taxed. There might be a tax deduction for the contribution if you itemize expenses on Schedule A. But few people itemize expenses these days, so most people receive no offsetting tax benefit for the contribution. It's a different story when the distribution qualifies as a QCD. A charitable contribution from a traditional IRA that qualifies as a QCD isn't included in your gross income. The tradeoff is that you don't receive a charitable deduction for it. If you're taking RMDs from the traditional IRA, the QCD counts toward the RMD for the year. You can take all or part of the RMD without having to include it in gross income to the extent you have QCDs for the year. An anomaly in the tax code is that QCDs can be made by any traditional IRA owner who is age 70½ or older, but after recent law changes RMDs don't begin until age 73. A potential trap is that when you are subject to RMDs, the first distributions from traditional IRAs for the year are considered RMDs and included in gross income. Some people take distributions from their IRAs early in the year. Later, they learn about QCDs or decide they want to make QCDs. But they can't reverse those earlier RMDs (except in limited cases within 60 days of the distribution) or turn them into QCDs. The distributions early in the year are part of their RMDs and must be included in gross income. QCDs can make the rest of the year's RMD tax free. Making QCDs early in the year is a good idea when you're planning to convert all or part of a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA and also have to take an RMD. The rule is that when you convert IRA assets, you first have to take any RMD for the year. If you take the RMD as a regular distribution, it's included in gross income. Then, the converted amount also is included in gross income. The RMD effectively adds to the tax cost of the conversion, because you have to take the RMD first. You must jump through certain hoops to have a distribution qualify as a QCD. To be a QCD, a charitable contribution must be made directly from the traditional IRA to a charity. The IRA owner can direct the IRA custodian to distribute the money directly to a named charity or charities. An IRA custodian also can give the owner a check made out to the charity for the owner to deliver to the charity. Some custodians give IRA owners checkbooks. The owners take IRA distributions by writing checks against their IRAs. When a check is made out to a charity, that can qualify as a QCD. The QCD can exceed your RMD for the year. If your RMD is $10,000, and you want to give $20,000 to charity during year, the entire $20,000 contribution can be made from the IRA as a QCD. But only $10,000 will count as an RMD for the year. The traditional IRA owner must be at least age 70½ on the date of the transfer from the IRA to the charity. Suppose you turn 70½ in September and had money transferred from the traditional IRA to a charity in March. That's not a QCD; it will be included in your gross income. You have to be at least 70½ on the date of the contribution for it to qualify as a QCD. There's an annual limit per taxpayer (not per IRA) on QCDs that now is adjusted for inflation each year. In 2025, the maximum QCD for the year is $108,000. In a married couple, each spouse has a separate $108,000 limit, but you can't share the limits or split the QCDs. If one spouse wants to make more than $108,000 of charitable donations for the year, he or she can't use part of the other spouse's QCD limit. If the couple wants to have $216,000 of QCDs, each must donate $108,000 from his or her traditional IRAs. Even if your RMD for the year exceeds $108,000, you can't have more than $108,000 of QCDs. Charitable contributions from a traditional IRA that exceed $108,000 in a year will be non-QCD distributions that are taxable. Unused portions of the annual limit don't carry forward to future years. The annual ceiling is a use-it-or-lose-it limit. Only pre-tax money can be used to make a QCD. That means any nondeductible contributions (after-tax money) in a traditional IRA can't be used to make QCDs. You can designate that only pre-tax money in the traditional IRA is used to make the QCD and after-tax money stays in the IRA. In general, QCDs can be made only from traditional IRAs. They can be made from simplified employee pensions (SEPs) and SIMPLE IRAs only when the plan hasn't received an employer contribution in the plan year that ends with or during the calendar year in which the charitable contribution is to be made. In other words, the SEP or SIMPLE IRA must be inactive. Other employer plans, including 401(k)s, don't qualify for QCDs. Inherited IRAs can be used to make QCDs. A contribution isn't a QCD if the IRA owner receives any benefit from the donation. Even a small gift or reward from the charity makes the entire contribution ineligible for a QCD. Also, you have to follow the basic rules for proving charitable contributions. You must have an acknowledgement in writing from the charity regarding the amount and date of the contribution. For large donations, additional proof might be required. Only donations to public charities qualify. Contributions to private foundations, donor-advised funds, and tax-exempt groups other than public charities aren't QCDs. A contribution from an IRA to fund a charitable gift annuity also doesn't receive QCD treatment. But for an exception see the new rules for Legacy IRAs. The SECURE Act permits contributions to traditional IRAs after age 70½. It also prohibits an individual from combining a QCD and deductible IRA contributions made after age 70½.

Ed Miliband has to go – before his net zero obsession wipes out our factories
Ed Miliband has to go – before his net zero obsession wipes out our factories

Telegraph

time15-03-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Ed Miliband has to go – before his net zero obsession wipes out our factories

Taxes were pushed up too much in the Budget. Global stock markets have been rattled by Donald Trump. And business and consumer confidence has collapsed. There were plenty of different factors that could explain the unexpected 0.1pc drop in Britain's GDP reported on Friday. And yet, you hardly need to be Hercule Poirot to figure out who the real culprit is: the climate-obsessed Ed Miliband, our Energy Secretary. The decline was led by a massive drop in manufacturing production. In reality, the collapse of Britain's industrial base is turning into a national emergency – and Miliband has to go before he wipes it out completely. According to Rachel Reeves, Donald Trump was to blame for the disappointing and unexpected fall in output reported this week. Without naming the US president directly, she argued that 'the world has changed, and across the globe we are feeling the consequences' – as she attempted to deflect the blame away from the government she is a part of.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store