If by expanded withholding tax you mean "backup withholding" applicable to only certain people/Cos (especially foreign), yes. I've never hear of the term you used.
According to IRS publication 54 (2007), pensions are "unearned income" and thus in the same category as capital gains, dividends and interest income. Withholding tax is not assessed on pensions, capital gains, dividends and interest.
Payors of dividends and interest do not ordinarily withhold income taxes from those payments. However, persons who do not report that income on their tax returns are subject to "backup withholding" of taxes from those payments.
Payors of dividends and interest do not ordinarily withhold income taxes from those payments. However, persons who do not report that income on their tax returns are subject to "backup withholding" of taxes from those payments.
income payments to the partnership is not subject to withholding as its income is not subject to taxes
No. Dividends in a Roth IRA account are not subject to income tax.
are employees that are currently receiving social security and medicare benefits subject to fica withholding
NO
No.
Albert R Eddy has written: 'Dividends and firm value' -- subject(s): Dividends
the GPP itself are exempt for withholding tax but if the income payment are payable direct to the members of the GPP then it is subject to withholdinbg tax.. The GPP is not a taxable entity because its member are taxable individually, so the gpp are exempt from withholding..
Peter O'Shea has written: 'Beating the S&P with dividends' -- subject(s): Corporations, Dividends, Finance
Elizabeth McHugh has written: 'Dividends and losses in the U.K' -- subject(s): Profit, Dividends, Corporate profits, Earnings per share