The United States resident needs to report worldwide income from
United States and from foreign sources. The wage from United States
is reported in W-2, and we take the box 1 amount. The wage from
foreign countries are not reported in the format, can we take some
pretax deductions and derive the box 1 amount? Let us take a Chinese
paycheck stub as an example to make the question more clear.
Monthly salary: 24,000
Food allowance: 220
Retirement ("401K"): 2,000
Medical fund ("HSA"): 500
Provident housing fund: 3,000
Taxable income: 13,720
The taxable income per Chinese law is calculated as:
24,000 + 220 - 2,000 - 500 - 3,000 - 5,000 ("monthly standard deduction") = 13,720
When we report the foreign income in US tax return, do we report:
[a] Gross income: 24,200
[b] Taxable income per Chinese law: 13,720
[c] "Box 1 amount" computer per US law: 24,000 + 2,000 - 2,000 - 500
[d] Other
On one hand, the US law does not apply to China, and the pretax
items in China are not mapped exactly to the ones in the US. For
example, the 401K in the US is elective and in China is mandatory,
and there is no "High Deductible Health Plan". On one
hand, it would not be fair to report the gross income ("box 5
amount"). How to solve this dilemma?
Also the exchange rate used should be at the time of the income,
at the end of year, or at the reporting time?
This discussion has been locked. No new contributions can be made. You may start a new discussion here
You have a number of concepts confused.
For US tax purposes, worldwide income is reportable and taxable based on US tax law (regardless of how an income or benefit, including pension, is or is not subject to tax in a foreign jurisdiction) unless otherwise excepted or exempted by domestic statutes or modified by an income tax treaty provision.
Instead of looking at how Chinese IIT is computed, which is based on a standard formula, you need to determine whether he is a domicile or non-domicile tax resident because the scope of taxation is different and that determines how his foreign tax credit should be computed.
Exchange rate for income and expenses would generally be spot rates unless it is ratably earned or incurred. QBU is handled with functional currency being the foreign currency and §988 will apply. Exchange rates for foreign tax credit gets a bit more complicated - you can refer to F.1116 filing instruction as well as §§905 and 986 for details.
In case you are not familiar with international taxation, you may be well-advised to farm out this type of work to a specialist, especially one who understands both US tax and the taxation system of the country in which your client is based.
OP is asking this on another forum, too and not liking the same answer.
Am glad you are sticking around sir. I've been following the thread but am not sure am clear about the conclusion. So let me ask the question for my benefit, if you dont mind that it is becoming redundant. My client earns foreign income and foreign pension is only item deducted before foreign income tax rate is applied.
I also was considering what to report, Gross Wages or Taxable Wages (Gross less pensions). I have searched instructions and publications and I have not found anything that gives me the explicit instruction to report anything such as Taxable Wages.
So, do I understand that I must report Gross Wages, without regard to employee contribution to pension plan which is deducted before tax?
Thanks for your response, and am sorry that I am repeating what you probably already have answered. I appreciate what you do.
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the Intuit Accountants Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the community and be taken to that site instead.