So far, from what I could read online (in this guide and on the wikia, among other sources):
Briefing screen
Pay grade
The pay grade for a mission indicates how much cash players can expect to get out of a mission -- source.
Also this thread suggests it can go up to 10 stars.
Day rate
The dayly income rate is a cash reward with a multiplier for the day a heist takes (e.g. 1x in The Bank Heists and 3x in the Rats Heist) -- source.
Contract pay
The contract payment is a flat amount of cash reward based on the number of white stars (pay grade) -- source.
Payday
The overall payday is the sum of the other two cash rewards (pay grade and contract pay) and will be shown on the map if you select a heist -- source.
Yellow bonuses
These bonuses come directly from the difficulty (or "risk") of the mission, pictured by the yellow skulls on this very same screen. Normal = no skull -- overkill = 3 skulls.
Debriefing screen
Instant cash and bag loot items
The instant cash it the one you loot and put in your pockets directly during the game (jewels, cash bundles, ...) The bags are those heavy packs of money, jewels or even drug you'll have to carry in order to achieve a mission.
Balance
This section contains the sum of all the amounts contained in the Income section ($332,400 in the example given in the question) distributed between two type of accounts: the offshore account and the spending cash.
Offshore account
The offshore account consist of most of the money players steal during the course of their heisting career.
The player has no way of interacting with their offshore account and is only used to show off how much the player has stolen -- source.
Since August 30 2013, you can use your offshore account to directly buy specific missions from Crime.net.
Spending cash
The cash you get, finally. In the given example, it's 10% of the total amount, but so far I couldn't find any precise calculation to know if that percentage can vary or not.
This is the offshore account money and 10% of that becomes you spendable cash. -- source.
Apparently, you get back all of your skill points and 50% of the cash spent. From this guide:
If you want to respec your skill points, you can either respec a certain
tree (not branch) or just all four trees if you would like. The number of cash
shown at the respec button is not what you have to pay but what you
will get back for respecing. The amount is 50 % of the cash you used
to spend on the skill tree(s).
Best Answer
If you have $0 spending money at the time you kill a civilian, no money is technically deducted. Cleaner costs are deducted directly from your spending money as soon as you kill a civilian, and your spending money cannot go into the negative. Therefore, no money is actually deducted from your spending money.