Showing posts with label tax cut expiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tax cut expiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

The Bush Tax Cuts and Small Business Owners

The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, and the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, are the two pieces of legislation that are commonly referred to as the Bush tax cuts. They offer different forms of relief to most taxpayers in this country, and have been getting plenty of attention in the media as pressure mounts on Congress to either extend the tax laws, or let them expire at the end of the year. However, reporters and bloggers are focusing on the effect these cuts have had on small business owners specifically, as unemployment problems continue to hinder economic recovery.

Tax Rates and Incentives

The two pieces of legislation from the early 2000’s had a handful of effects on U.S. tax law. They reduced the “marriage penalty,” provided incentives to parents and low income working Americans, and also increased credits for education and retirement saving accounts. Most importantly, however the cuts reduced tax rates across the board. The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act created six tax brackets based on income level (10%, 15%, 25%, 28%, 33%, and 35%). If the laws expire, the 10% bracket would disappear, and the brackets would revert back to 15%, 28%, 31%, 36% and 39.6%. This would represent an increase for nearly all Americans who pay taxes. Additionally, changes to itemized deduction phase outs could eliminate up to 80% of deductions for higher income taxpayers.

Capital Gains and Qualified Dividends

The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts also reduced the maximum tax rate on capital gains and qualified dividends from 20% to 15%. If allowed to expire, the top capital gains rate would return to 20% and qualified dividends would be taxed at the same rate as a taxpayer’s income, or up to 39.6%.

Looming Expiration

Unless extended, the Bush tax cuts are scheduled to expire at the end of the year. If Congress fails to act before they take their winter break, then the tax rates will automatically revert to what they were in 2000. Some experts are asserting that extending all of the cuts would provide a temporary economic stimulus, however the Congressional Budget Office asserts doing so would only have a slight impact on the economy. Others are warning that letting all the tax cuts expire could hurt small business owners, and hinder job creation.

Obama's Proposal

Instead of choosing to extend the cuts, or let them all expire, the White House has proposed a compromise. President Obama would like to extend all of the cuts for low and middle income Americans, while letting the cuts that impact taxpayers making over $200,000 ($250,000 for joint filers) expire.

Small Businesses and Job Creation

One of the most confusing aspects of the Bush tax cuts is how they will affect business owners, and the ongoing unemployment problem in this country. Many conservative experts have argued that even letting only the cuts that affect high-income taxpayers would hurt the recovering economy. Senator Orrin Hatch even said that allowing the cuts to expire would amount to "a job-killing tax hike on small business during tough economic times."

This statement is somewhat misleading. We can assume that a business owner making over $200,000 does not own a mom-and-pop store in a struggling neighborhood. Although 24% of taxpayers report some income from a business, only about 2.5% of Americans – or 900,000 taxpayers – would be affected Obama’s proposal. However, that 2.5% reports an estimated $400 billion in income, or nearly 44% of all business income in the country.

Impact on Larger Businesses

It is also important to note that there are over half a million taxpayers in the country who report business income over $700,000. These taxpayers would be significantly impacted by Obama’s proposal to let some of the Bush tax cuts expire. In addition to an increased income tax rate, they would also be hurt by capital gains tax increases, and the new deduction phase-outs. Although not technically small business owners, these doctors, investors, or successful owners of multiple franchise locations, employ a number of taxpayers.

Unemployment Problems

Although it is easy to review statistics from the IRS regarding income levels, it is difficult to predict exactly what impact the tax cuts have on job creation and unemployment. Some claim that any additional taxes would stop a business owner from hiring more employees. Others argue that the revenue from letting some cuts expire would lead to less government borrowing, and a better economy where small business credit is more easily accessible.

Federal Revenue

If Congress went with President Obama’s proposal and passed legislation allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire for taxpayers earning over $200,000 ($250,000 for joint filers), this it could generate an estimated $1.5 trillion in federal revenue over the next 10 years.

Future of the Bush Tax Cuts

When Congress returns after Labor Day, they will have a hand full of tax issues to consider, including the Bush tax cuts. However, with elections in only a few months, there is a lot of pressure on members of Congress to act a certain way. With the Democratic Party fighting to keep their majority, we might see a politically motivated compromise designed to please taxpayers.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

What Would Happen if the Bush Tax Cuts Expire

From the Wall Street Journal.com:

What would it actually mean for you if they let the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of this year, and we went back to the old Bill Clinton tax rates adjusted for inflation?

This is a thought experiment, not a prediction or a recommendation.

The tax cuts, passed in 2001 and 2003, are front and center now and will be a hot issue going into the elections this fall. Unless something is done by the end of the year, they'll expire. With the economic recovery looking shaky, expiration is particularly controversial.

Most of the attention has understandably focused on highest earners, who are likely to be most affected by whatever happens. But as the debate has gathered pace I have been wondering what it might mean for everyone else. After all, according to the IRS just 4% of Americans earn more than $200,000 a year.

How high were taxes back in the 1990s? How would those rates seem now? The American Institute of CPAs supplied me with the numbers. I updated the tax brackets to account for inflation.

Sure, everyone's taxes are different, and the U.S. tax code is so horrendously Byzantine that the moment you say anything you run into a thicket of caveats. But let's run some numbers. And let's take a very broad brush approach to this. Let's assume you're a typical filer, you take the standard deduction, and let's just look at the biggest tax issues.

Monday, November 23, 2009

House Prepares To Renew Expiring Tax Cuts For One Year

After voting to extend the homebuyers credit just a few weeks ago, Congress is already making plans to extend $37 billion in tax cuts for individuals and businesses in 2010. Leaders of the House of Representatives have been working on legislation and assert that they plan to pass the legislation by the end of the year as part of an effort to create jobs.

According to a summary obtained by Dow Jones Newswires, the package will be offset by tax-raising provisions, but those provisions are not identified in the summary.

The draft bill omits a provision to temporarily shield middle-class taxpayers from the alternative minimum tax in 2010. Congress earlier this year passed an AMT "patch" for 2009.

Since the lack of an AMT patch for 2010 won't affect most taxpayers until they file tax returns in 2011, House lawmakers said they will likely wait until next year to pass it.

High-tech firms and manufacturers would gain a one-year extension of the research tax credit, while banks would get an extension of a tax break on their overseas business income.

NASCAR racetracks would win another year of more favorable depreciation rules under the House bill, as would retail stores and restaurants.

Continue reading at Nasdaq.com

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