SUPPORTING STATEMENT
REG-102822-08
OMB #1545-2155
The collection of information is in §1.108-7(d)(4) of the Income Tax Regulations. Section 108(a) of the Internal Revenue Code provides an exclusion from gross income for income from discharge of indebtedness (COD income) if the discharge occurs in certain situations. Taxpayers must reduce tax attributes as provided in § 108(b) for certain types of excluded COD income. For S corporations, § 108(d)(7)(A) provides that the tax attribute reduction under § 108(b) is performed at the corporate, rather than shareholder level. Section 108(d)(7)(B) provides that a particular shareholder level tax attribute (losses and deductions suspended under § 1366(d)) is treated as a corporate level tax attribute for purposes of the tax attribute reduction under § 108(b). The collection of information required is that, for taxable years in which an S corporation excludes COD income under § 108(a), each shareholder of the S corporation during the taxable year of the discharge must provide to the S corporation the amount of the shareholder’s relevant tax attribute. This information will be used by the S corporation to perform the tax attribute reduction under § 108(b). Furthermore, the S corporation must provide to each shareholder the amount of any of the S corporation’s excess tax attribute pursuant to §1.108-7(d)(2).
The information will be used by the S corporation to make adjustments that are required under § 108(b). The information will be used by the shareholders to determine their tax liability in succeeding taxable years.
We have no plans to offer electronic filing. IRS publication, regulations, notices and letters are to be electronically enabled on an as practicable basis in accordance with the IRS Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998.
We have attempted to eliminate duplication within the agency wherever possible.
There are no small entities affected by this collection.
If the IRS did not collect this information, the taxpayer would not have the means to calculate the correct interest that would impact their tax liability and the revenue needed to support the Federal government.
There are no special circumstances requiring data collection to be inconsistent with guidelines in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2) .
A notice of proposed rulemaking and a notice of public hearing (REG-102822-08, 2008-38 I.R.B. 744) were published in the Federal Register (73 FR 45656) on August 6, 2008 proposing amendments to the regulations regarding the manner in which an S corporation reduces its tax attributes under section 108(b) for taxable years in which the S corporation has discharge of indebtedness income that is excluded from gross income under section 108(a).
These final regulations were adopted per TD 9469 on October 29, 2009 [2009-48 IRB 687].
In response to the Federal Register notice dated August 20, 2015 (80 FR 50716), we received no public comments during the 60 day comment period.
No payment or gift has been provided to any respondents.
Generally, tax returns and tax return information are confidential as required by 26 USC 6103.
No personally identifiable information (PII) is collected.
The burden for collection of information is in §1.108-7(d)(4). If an S corporation excludes COD income from gross income under section 108(a) for a taxable year, each shareholder of the S corporation during the taxable year of the discharge must provide to the S corporation the amount of the shareholder’s losses and deductions that are disallowed for the taxable year of the discharge under section 1366(d)(1).
We estimate that there are 1,000 S corporations and shareholders which will be affected by discharge of indebtedness income that is excluded from gross income under section 108(a). We estimate that it will take an average of 1 hour for each S corporation or shareholder to comply with the recordkeeping requirements in §1.108-7(d)(4) for a total burden estimated to be 1,000 hours.
Estimates of the annualized cost to respondents for the hour burdens associated with the information collection are not available at this time.
There is no estimated annual cost burden to the respondents.
There are no start-up costs associated with this collection.
There are no changes to the taxpayer burden previously approved by OMB.
There are no plans for tabulation, statistical analysis and publication.
We believe that displaying the OMB expiration date is inappropriate because it could cause confusion by leading taxpayers to believe that the regulations sunset as of the expiration date. Taxpayers are not likely to be aware that the Service intends to request renewal of the OMB approval and obtain a new expiration date before the old one expires.
There are no exceptions to the certification statement.
Note: The following paragraph applies to all of the collections of information in this submission:
An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection of information displays a valid OMB control number. Books or records relating to a collection of information must be retained as long as their contents may become material in the administration of any internal revenue law. Generally, tax returns and tax return information are confidential, as required by 26 U.S.C. 6103.
File Type | text/rtf |
File Title | #1545-2155 supporting statement |
Author | Internal Revenue Service |
Last Modified By | Department of Treasury |
File Modified | 2015-12-14 |
File Created | 2015-12-14 |