SESSION OF 2002
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE
ON SENATE BILL NO. 408
As Recommended by Senate Committee on
Brief
SB 408 would clarify current law regarding how income is reported for Kansas corporate income tax purposes. The bill would confirm that Kansas uses a transactional test to determine whether income is apportionable business income. Under the transactional test, the controlling factor for the determination of business income is the nature of the particular transaction giving rise to the income. To be business income, the transaction and activity must have been in the regular course of the taxpayer’s business operations.
Background
The Senate Committee held a hearing on SB 408,
at which time proponents of the bill included representatives of
the Kansas Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the Tax Coalition, and
the Kansas Department of Revenue.
Under
current law a distinction is made between “business
income,” which is apportioned to all states in which a
taxpayer does business, and “non-business income,”
which is generally allocated to the state of commercial domicile of
the taxpayer. There are two tests to determine whether income is
apportionable business income: the transactional test and the
functional test. Kansas has traditionally used the transactional
test, which is narrower than the functional test. In 1996,
legislation was enacted which enabled taxpayers to elect, for
ten-year increments, to treat all income as business income. Senate
conferees explained that the 1996 legislation has been interpreted
by some to have adopted the functional test in Kansas. SB 408 would
clarify that this was not the case and that Kansas still uses the
transactional test.
The
Senate Committee recommended that SB 408 be placed on the Consent
Calendar.
The Division of the Budget reports that there is no fiscal effect associated with SB 408.