Does anyone know how this was designed? I realize that each state will be interpreting it and administering it.
The classic case would be an independent contractor who gets a 1099 in his name and puts it on a Schedule C. That should be a piece of cake and every state should be able to handle that. A slight complication would be if the worker had set up a single member LLC and 1099s were issued that way.
How about independent contractors who are in partnership with others....maybe just a husband/wife situation. Does the law anticipate that and recognize that two people (or more) are involved?
My assumption is that the spirit of the law was to include all "deserving" workers even if they don't work under the employer/employee relationship.
The classic case would be an independent contractor who gets a 1099 in his name and puts it on a Schedule C. That should be a piece of cake and every state should be able to handle that. A slight complication would be if the worker had set up a single member LLC and 1099s were issued that way.
How about independent contractors who are in partnership with others....maybe just a husband/wife situation. Does the law anticipate that and recognize that two people (or more) are involved?
My assumption is that the spirit of the law was to include all "deserving" workers even if they don't work under the employer/employee relationship.
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