NGPF- Taxes

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36 Terms

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1040

The standard Internal Revenue Service (IRS) form that individuals use to file their annual income tax returns.

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1099

A form that details all "non-employee" compensation, including for specific jobs like freelancers or contractors

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Audit

An inspection of a filer's tax return by the IRS

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Capital Gain

Profit from the sale of an asset, such as a stock or a bond, calculated by subtracting the price you initially paid from the price you then sold it for

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Corporate Income Tax

A percentage of profits paid by a business to the federal and state government

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Dependent

Someone you financially support who can be "claimed" on a tax return to reduce your taxable income and lower your taxes

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Discretionary Spending

Spending by the federal government determined by legislative action and approved through votes by elected officials

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Dividend

Money from the profits of a company that is paid out to its shareholders, typically on a quarterly basis

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Earned income

Any income (wages/salary) that is generated by working

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Effective Tax Rate

The actual rate you pay on your taxes, as a percentage of your overall income.

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Excise Tax

A tax paid on purchases of a specific good, like gasoline or cigarettes

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Exemption

The set amount of money, per dependent, you can subtract from your taxable income

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Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA)

A federal law that requires an employer to withhold taxes from the wages they pay their employees; the funds go toward Social Security and Medicare

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Filing Status

A category that defines the type of tax return an individual will use, primarily based on marital status; it also determines the size of your tax brackets and how much of your income is taxed at each rate

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I-9

Form used by an employer to verify an employee's identity and to establish that the worker is eligible to accept employment in the United States.

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Income Tax

Taxes paid by employees to federal and state government through a direct deduction from their paycheck

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interest income

Income earned through interest in savings accounts, bonds, CDs, etc.

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mandatory spending

Spending by the federal government required by previously existing laws, including funding programs like Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid

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Marginal Tax Rate (MTR)

The tax bracket that your highest dollar of income falls into, and therefore the highest tax rate you pay

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Medicaid

A government-run insurance program that provides healthcare assistance to elderly and disabled Americans

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Paycheck Stub

A document attached to every paycheck that details your earnings and the amount withheld for taxes, health insurance, retirement funds, etc.

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payroll tax

Federal and state taxes that all employers must pay, based on a percentage of the employee's salary. They go to such things as Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid.

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Progressive Tax

A tax system that uses tax brackets to collect a larger percentage from the income of high-income earners than it does from low-income earners

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Social Security

A federal program that provides monthly benefits to millions of Americans, including retirees, military families, surviving families of deceased workers, and disabled individuals

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Standard Deduction

A standardized dollar amount that reduces your taxable income, specifically for individuals who do not receive additional benefit by itemizing their deductions into medical expenses, donations, etc.

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Tax Bracket

A range of income amounts that are taxed at a particular rate

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Tax Credit

An amount subtracted directly from the tax owed

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tax deduction

An amount that can be subtracted from person's tax liability that lowers their taxable income

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tax rate

The percentage at which taxes are paid on each dollar of income

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Tax Return

an annual report to the IRS summarizing total income, deductions, and the taxes withheld by employers

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Taxable Income

The amount of income that is used to calculate an individual's or a company's income tax due.

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Tax Refund

The amount of income that is used to calculate an individual's or a company's income tax due

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Unearned income

Income recieved from sources other than employment

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W-2

A form that an employer must send to an employee and the IRS at the end of the year to report the employee's annual wages and taxes withheld from their paycheck

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W-4

A form completed by an employee to indicate his or her tax situation (exemptions, marital status, etc.) to the employer, who then withholds the corresponding amount of taxes from each paycheck

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Withholding

The portion of an employee's wages that is not included in their paycheck because it goes directly to federal, state and local taxes