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Encyclopedia > Accelerated depreciation

Accelerated depreciation refers to allowing a company to depreciate an asset (such as a unit of machinery) at a higher-than-normal rate, thus reducing taxes payable. Generally, this is for corporate profit tax, although it may be applied to other taxes in some cases. Declining-balance depreciation of a $50,000 asset with $6,500 salvage value over 20 years. ... Profit tax in Hong Kong is Direct tax and also classified into Income tax. ...


Technically, accelerated depreciation constitutes tax deferral: in theory, profit taxes will be higher in subsequent years as the deduction to reduce taxes payable in future years will be lower. Businesses generally prefer to use accelerated depreciation when available, however, due to the time value of money: money now is preferable to money in the future. This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ... The time value of money (TVM) is a way of calculating the value of a sum of money, at any time in the present or future. ...


For companies that do not or would not have taxable profits, accelerated depreciation is not useful.


Some forms of accelerated depreciation may be considered subsidies. In economics, a subsidy is generally a monetary grant given by a government to lower the price faced by producers or consumers of a good, generally because it is considered to be in the public interest. ...


For accounting purposes, different time periods for depreciation may be used and the term accelerated depreciation may be encountered. True accelerated depreciation refers to tax incentives, however: a firm may accelerate depreciation to improve reporting, but the test should be to match the depreciation schedule to the true value or useful life of the asset.

Contents

Background

Companies in many countries pay taxes on profits: revenues minus expenses. There are various types of expenses, including salaries paid to workers, cost of inputs, and amortization and depreciation. Profits for tax purposes will, in most countries, differ from accounting profits or earnings. Profit, from Latin meaning to make progress, is defined in two different ways. ... Revenue is a U.S. business term for the amount of money that a company earns from its activities in a given period, mostly from sales of products and/or services to customers. ... In accounting, an expense represents an event in which an asset is used up or a liability is incurred. ... Amortization may refer to: Amortization (business), the allocation of a lump sum amount to different time periods. ... Declining-balance depreciation of a $50,000 asset with $6,500 salvage value over 20 years. ... In accounting terms, accounting profit is the total revenue minus costs properly chargeable against the goods sold (Ref. ... In classical economics and all micro-economics labour is one of three factors of production, the others being land and capital. ...


Under both financial accounting and tax accounting, companies are not allowed to claim the entire cost of a capital asset (any asset which can be used for many years) as an expense immediately. They must amortize the cost of the asset over some period, usually an approximation of the useful life of the asset. The field of accounting that serves external decision makers, such as stockholders, suppliers, banks and government agencies See also: Management accounting field of accounting concerned with external users of a companys financial information. ... In accounting, a capital asset is an asset that is recorded as capital - that is, property that creates more property, e. ...


Example

As a simple example, a company buys a generator that costs $1,000 that is expected to last for 10 years. Under the most simple form of depreciation, the company might allocate $100 of the cost of the generator to its expenses every year, until the $1000 capital expense has been "used up." Under accelerated depreciation, the company may be allowed to allocate $200 of the cost of the generator for five years. Electrical generator Generator (Mathematics) ...


If the company has $200 in profits per year (before consideration of the cost of the generator or any effects of debt or other factors), and the tax rate is 20%: Debt is that which is owed; usually referencing assets owed, but the term can cover other obligations. ...


a) Normal depreciation: the company claims $100 in depreciation every year and has a tax profit of $100; it must pay profit tax of $20 every year. Over ten years, $200 in taxes are paid. Tax profit or taxable profit is used to distinguish between accounting profit or earnings (the number that is generally referred to in financial results for public companies and quoted in the press). ...


b) Accelerated depreciation: the company claims $200 in depreciation for the first five years, and nothing for the last five years. For the first five years, it has no taxable profit and pays no profit tax. For the last five years, the company has a tax profit of $200, and pays $40 per year in profit tax, for a total of $200.


To compare these two (simplified) cases, the company pays $200 in taxes in both instances. In the second case, it has deferred taxes to a much later period.


Additional factors

If the company retained the cash and invested it in a bank account, clearly it could earn interest on this deposit. Equally, the company could invest it in any other type of project. If these projects result in additional profit, the total tax paid to the government may actually be higher in nominal terms. Conversely, the company could borrow money to buy another generator, and potentially use accelerated depreciation to delay paying taxes further. Other tax effects may mean that government revenue is neutral or increases even in the short term. A nominal is a word or a group of words that functions as a noun, i. ...


In essence, accelerated depreciation can be seen as government "loaning" the company money for a limited period of time, and potentially increasing its total tax revenue in the long term. For the company, "borrowing" from the government may reduce the need for external finance (borrowing) from other sources. This government "loan" may be substantially less expensive than money from other lenders, and would not require the approval of lenders, particularly where the company's business is risky. ...


Governments generally provide opportunities to defer taxes where there are specific policy reasons to encourage an industry. For example, accelerated depreciation is used in some countries to encourage investment in renewable energy. Renewable energy is energy which can be replenished at the same rate it is used. ...


See Also

Declining-balance depreciation of a $50,000 asset with $6,500 salvage value over 20 years. ... The Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) is the current method of accelerated asset depreciation required by the United States income tax code. ... Cost segregation is the process of identifying personal property assets that often get buried or lumped together within the Real Property asset category. ...

External Links

  • Cost Segregation Partners. Includes sample accelerated depreciation cost segregation report and accelerated depreciation cost segregation calculator

  Results from FactBites:
 
"Accelerated depreciation" Definition (111 words)
Accelerated cost recovery system (A.C.R.S.), which is a depreciation schedule allowed for tax purposes, is one such example.
Accelerated depreciation - Any depreciation method that produces larger deductions for depreciation in the early years of a assets life.
Accelerated depreciation : any depreciation method that produces larger deductions for depreciation in the early years of a assets life.
RBT Final Report - Section 8: Capital Allowances (9132 words)
Nevertheless, the impact from the removal of accelerated depreciation could be that the level of investment, employment, and activity in the more capital-intensive sectors of the economy might decline.
Some submissions argued that accelerated depreciation was necessary because the effective lives of some investments were uncertain due to changing technology or other factors that could influence the rate of obsolescence.
Applying 50 per cent of the pool depreciation rate to assets in the year of purchase overcomes the need to pro-rate deductions and is consistent with the simplification aim of this measure.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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