Ran into an unusual topic with a retired scientist. Apparently, in his youth, he was an aspiring songwriter. He has been receiving royalties for over 40 years for a song he wrote, recorded by Patsy Cline. Not a huge hit by anyone's standards, but sometimes, somewhere, some radio station will play it, and he still receives some $300/year, even though the song has long ago moved into public domain.
Is this Schedule C or Schedule E?? Not that this amount is that big an issue.
Before you answer, he tells me in the early days of the song, IRS told him all songwriters had to report payments as royalties on Schedule E. At the time, unearned income had a incremental ceiling of 70%, and was taxed at the highest rate the IRS could muster.
I vaguely remember the year of a drastic change. Nixon was president. He had a Democratic congress who kept putting pressure to institute a so-called "minimum tax" for filthy rich taxpayers who used huge tax breaks to lower their tax. Nixon wasn't wild about the idea but consented to the minimum tax by also writing in a "maximum" tax of 50% on earned income. This kept wealthy corporate CEOs out of the 70% tax bracket, and in time, even the 70% tax bracket became history. And so, the alternative minimum tax was born, designed to tax the "very rich."
Sorry for the tangent on history -- I really only wanted to know whether song royalties are earned income or not...and after they've been around so long, does the interpretation change...
Is this Schedule C or Schedule E?? Not that this amount is that big an issue.
Before you answer, he tells me in the early days of the song, IRS told him all songwriters had to report payments as royalties on Schedule E. At the time, unearned income had a incremental ceiling of 70%, and was taxed at the highest rate the IRS could muster.
I vaguely remember the year of a drastic change. Nixon was president. He had a Democratic congress who kept putting pressure to institute a so-called "minimum tax" for filthy rich taxpayers who used huge tax breaks to lower their tax. Nixon wasn't wild about the idea but consented to the minimum tax by also writing in a "maximum" tax of 50% on earned income. This kept wealthy corporate CEOs out of the 70% tax bracket, and in time, even the 70% tax bracket became history. And so, the alternative minimum tax was born, designed to tax the "very rich."
Sorry for the tangent on history -- I really only wanted to know whether song royalties are earned income or not...and after they've been around so long, does the interpretation change...
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