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Taxes Vocabulary

Personal Finance Gros Income and Taxes Vocabulary

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TaxTo impose a financial charge or other levy upon a taxpayer (an individual or legal entity) by a state or the functional equivalent of a state such that failure to pay is punishable by law.
Gross IncomeTotal of an employee's regular remuneration including allowances, overtime pay, commissions, and bonuses, etc., before any deductions are made.
Net IncomeFor an individual, gross income minus taxes, allowances, and deductions. An individual's net income is used to determine how much income tax is owed.
Property TaxLevy on the value of property, an ad valorem tax that the owner is required to pay. Property tax can be defined as a "tax imposed by municipalities upon owners of real property within their jurisdiction based on the value of such property." multiply the assessed value of the property by the mill rate and then divide by 1,000. multiply the assessed value of the property by the mill rate and then divide by 1,000.
Income TaxAnnual charge levied on both earned income (wages, salaries, commission) and unearned income (dividends, interest, rents).
State TaxTaxes imposed by a specific state on individuals that inhabit, shop, or do business within its jurisdictions. These taxes may be assessed in the form of the deductions from wages or additional fees billed to the individual or business.
FICAThe federal law which requires employers to withhold a portion of employee wages and pay them to the government trust fund which provides retirement benefits. An acronym for Federal Insurance Contributions Act. More commonly known as social security.
MedicareA federal program that pays for certain health care expenses for people aged 65 or older. Enrolled individuals must pay deductibles and co-payments, but much of their medical costs are covered by the program.
Local TaxesAn additional tax on top of federal and state taxes, usually collected in the form of property taxes.
Federal TaxesComparison of tax rates around the world is difficult and somewhat subjective. Tax laws in most countries are extremely complex, and tax burden falls differently on different groups in each country and sub-national unit. The lists below give an indication by rank of some raw indicators.
State TaxesIs an income tax in the United States that is levied by each state.
Federal Tax BracketsIncome tax groupings specified by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that determine at what rate an individual, trust, or corporation's annual income will be subject to federal income tax.
Federal Income TaxAn income tax is a tax levied on the income of individuals or business (corporations or other legal entities). Various income tax systems exist, with varying degrees of tax incidence. Income taxation can be progressive, proportional, or regressive.
Graduated (Progressive) Income Tax SystemA tax with a rate that increases as make more money.
Personal Tax LiabilityObligation for which an individual is responsible and which may be satisfied out of his or her assets.
Gross PayWhat you make before any deductions.
Net PayThe amount left over after deductions from the gross salary. the remaining amount after deductions
Flat TaxFixed rate tax; that is, the tax amount is independent of the sum or value it is charged on.
W-4A tax form prepared by an employee for an employer indicating the employee's exemptions and Social Security number, and enabling the employer to determine the amount of taxes to be withheld for the employee. When you start a job.
Personal TaxTax paid on one's personal income as distinct from the tax paid on the firm's earnings. In an incorporated firm, the owners (shareholders) pay taxes on both their income (salary or dividend from the firm) firm's income (profits). In partnerships and sole-ownerships, the tax is paid only once on the firm's profits.
Regular PayIs the hourly rate or monthly salary paid for a job
Sales TaxA consumption tax charged at the point of purchase for certain goods and services. The tax amount is usually calculated by applying a percentage rate to the taxable price of a sale.
Personal Tax LiabilityThe basics of calculating personal tax liability can be broken down into four sums: total income, adjusted gross income, taxable income and total tax.
ExemptionsPersonal allowance or specific monetary exemption which may be claimed by an individual to reduce taxable income under some systems.
PayperiodThe regular schedule by which employers pay employees. (weekly, Bi-weekly, Semi-monthly, Monthly)
TaxpayerA person who pays a tax to national, state, county or municipal governments.
Excise TaxTaxes paid when purchases are made on a specific good, such as gasoline, and are often included in the price of the product rather than being listed separately.
Tax DeadlineApril 15th
IRSInternal Revenue Service
Effective Tax Rate=Tax Owed/Gross Income
Marginal Tax Ratethe highest tax bracket based on Taxable income
Flat Tax SystemOne tax rate for everyone
Progressive Tax SystemWhat we us in the USA the percentage of income an individual (or household) pays in taxes tends to increase with increasing income.



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