Choice "A" is correct. In 2013, taxpayers can contribute and deduct up to $5,500 per year to an IRA, and alimony is considered earned income for IRA purposes. For couples filing a joint return where at least one spouse is an active participant in a retirement plan, the deductible portion of the contribution is phased out. For a spouse who is an active participant, the phase-out range in 2013 begins at AGI of $95,000 and is complete at $115,000. For a spouse who is not an active participant, but is married to someone who is, the phase-out range begins at $178,000 and is complete at $188,000 (2013). The earned income for IRA purposes here is $40,000 ($35,000 + $5,000) which is below both phase-out ranges, so each spouse receives a deduction of the $5,000 contribution actually made.Choice "c" is incorrect. Pat's alimony is deemed "earned income" for the IRA contributions. However, even if Pat had no earned income, a spouse with no earned income can deduct up to $5,500, provided the couple's combined earned income is at least $11,000.Choice "b" is incorrect. The $2,000 was a pre-2002 rule for IRA contribution limits for individuals and is a distractor in this case.
Choice "d" is incorrect. When a taxpayer or taxpayer's spouse is an active participant in a pension plan at work, the full deduction is allowed if the earned income of the couple is below the phase-out ranges (as is in this case).