ASMP Issues Call to Action on Proposed Tax Rule
Under the proposed rule change, if business owners pay any vendor more than $600 for goods and services in a given tax year, they would have to to report the total expenditures by issuing a 1099 form to each vendor--and forwarding a copy to the IRS.
Currently, businesses have to issue 1099 forms for payments over $600 to independent contractors for their services. But the new rules would extend the requirements to cover all goods and services purchases, including purchases of cameras, lenses, computers, office supplies, and other equipment.
That would mean not only tracking all expenditures (a beneficial thing in itself from a financial management standpoint), but issuing a multitude of 1099 forms at the end of every year. And to issue the forms, business owners would have to collect the name, address and tax ID number of every vendor.
To make matters even more difficult, if you purchase goods and services from a vendor who isn't incorporated (and therefore doesn't have a tax ID number), you would have to withhold the income taxes on the transaction yourself. Other businesses would have to withhold taxes on fees paid to you if you're not incorporated--which could compel a lot of photographers to incorporate.
Whether the rule change goes into effect--and what form it ultimately takes--depends upon the strength of the opposition. At least one Congressional representative has introduced legislation to block the rule, which was mandated as part of the recent health care overhaul. (The idea was to help pay for the reform by capturing portion of the $300 billion or more in tax revenues that the government loses each year because of unreported business income.)
The ASMP's call to action includes a draft of a sample letter for the convenience of photographers who want to protest the rule change.














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