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Thread: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

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    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
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    Default Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History
    July 7, 2010

    In just six months, the largest tax hikes in the history of America will take effect. They will hit families and small businesses in three great waves on January 1, 2011:

    (N.B. This version of the document contains even more tax hikes than the original version did)

    First Wave: Expiration of 2001 and 2003 Tax Relief

    In 2001 and 2003, the GOP Congress enacted several tax cuts for investors, small business owners, and families. These will all expire on January 1, 2011:

    Personal income tax rates will rise. The top income tax rate will rise from 35 to 39.6 percent (this is also the rate at which two-thirds of small business profits are taxed). The lowest rate will rise from 10 to 15 percent. All the rates in between will also rise. Itemized deductions and personal exemptions will again phase out, which has the same mathematical effect as higher marginal tax rates. The full list of marginal rate hikes is below:

    - The 10% bracket rises to an expanded 15%
    - The 25% bracket rises to 28%
    - The 28% bracket rises to 31%
    - The 33% bracket rises to 36%
    - The 35% bracket rises to 39.6%

    Higher taxes on marriage and family. The “marriage penalty” (narrower tax brackets for married couples) will return from the first dollar of income. The child tax credit will be cut in half from $1000 to $500 per child. The standard deduction will no longer be doubled for married couples relative to the single level. The dependent care and adoption tax credits will be cut.

    The return of the Death Tax.
    This year, there is no death tax. For those dying on or after January 1 2011, there is a 55 percent top death tax rate on estates over $1 million. A person leaving behind two homes and a retirement account could easily pass along a death tax bill to their loved ones.

    Higher tax rates on savers and investors. The capital gains tax will rise from 15 percent this year to 20 percent in 2011. The dividends tax will rise from 15 percent this year to 39.6 percent in 2011. These rates will rise another 3.8 percent in 2013.

    Second Wave: Obamacare

    There are over twenty new or higher taxes in Obamacare. Several will first go into effect on January 1, 2011. They include:

    The Tanning Tax. This went into effect on July 1st of this year. It imposes a new, 10% excise tax on getting a tan at a tanning salon. There is no exemption for tanners making less than $250,000 per year.

    The “Medicine Cabinet Tax”
    Thanks to Obamacare, Americans will no longer be able to use health savings account (HSA), flexible spending account (FSA), or health reimbursement (HRA) pre-tax dollars to purchase non-prescription, over-the-counter medicines (except insulin).

    The HSA Withdrawal Tax Hike. This provision of Obamacare increases the additional tax on non-medical early withdrawals from an HSA from 10 to 20 percent, disadvantaging them relative to IRAs and other tax-advantaged accounts, which remain at 10 percent.

    Brand Name Drug Tax.
    Starting next year, there will be a multi-billion dollar tax assessment imposed on name-brand drug manufacturers. This tax, like all excise taxes, will raise the price of medicine, hurting everyone.

    Economic Substance Doctrine. The IRS is now empowered to disallow perfectly-legal tax deductions and maneuvers merely because it judges that the deduction or action lacks “economic substance.” This is obviously an arbitrary empowerment of IRS agents.

    Employer Reporting of Health Insurance Costs on a W-2. This will start for W-2s in the 2011 tax year. While not a tax increase in itself, it makes it very easy for Congress to tax employer-provided healthcare benefits later.

    Third Wave: The Alternative Minimum Tax and Employer Tax Hikes

    When Americans prepare to file their tax returns in January of 2011, they’ll be in for a nasty surprise—the AMT won’t be held harmless, and many tax relief provisions will have expired. These major items include:

    The AMT will ensnare over 28 million families, up from 4 million last year.
    According to the left-leaning Tax Policy Center, Congress’ failure to index the AMT will lead to an explosion of AMT taxpaying families—rising from 4 million last year to 28.5 million. These families will have to calculate their tax burdens twice, and pay taxes at the higher level. The AMT was created in 1969 to ensnare a handful of taxpayers.

    Small business expensing will be slashed and 50% expensing will disappear. Small businesses can normally expense (rather than slowly-deduct, or “depreciate”) equipment purchases up to $250,000. This will be cut all the way down to $25,000. Larger businesses can expense half of their purchases of equipment. In January of 2011, all of it will have to be “depreciated.”

    Taxes will be raised on all types of businesses.
    There are literally scores of tax hikes on business that will take place. The biggest is the loss of the “research and experimentation tax credit,” but there are many, many others. Combining high marginal tax rates with the loss of this tax relief will cost jobs.

    Tax Benefits for Education and Teaching Reduced. The deduction for tuition and fees will not be available. Tax credits for education will be limited. Teachers will no longer be able to deduct classroom expenses. Coverdell Education Savings Accounts will be cut. Employer-provided educational assistance is curtailed. The student loan interest deduction will be disallowed for hundreds of thousands of families.

    Charitable Contributions from IRAs no longer allowed.
    Under current law, a retired person with an IRA can contribute up to $100,000 per year directly to a charity from their IRA. This contribution also counts toward an annual “required minimum distribution.” This ability will no longer be there.

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    Creepy Ass Cracka & Site Owner Ryan Ruck's Avatar
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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    The Coming 1099 Revolution: Are You and Your Clients Ready?
    Health care reform act provision vastly expands information reporting requirements.

    August 2010

    Revenue-raising provisions in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, PL 111-148, and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010, PL 111-152, like their health care provisions, have far-reaching implications. One could even fundamentally change the way we do business and keep records in the United States—by dramatically increasing information reporting requirements for business transactions.

    Under IRC §§ 6041(a) and (h) as amended by the Patient Protection Act, beginning Jan. 1, 2012, virtually all payments by a trade or business aggregating $600 or more to any single vendor during any calendar year will have to be reported at the end of each calendar year to the vendor and to the IRS on Form 1099. Vendors include almost anyone a trade or business pays in the course of doing business, other than its employees whose compensation is already reported on Forms W-2.

    Implementing this change will require collaboration among businesses and software vendors and likely the help of CPAs to correctly identify, characterize and report these transactions. Purchases affected could range from inventory to payments for advertising services to the electricity bill. IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman, however, said in a speech in May that the Service plans to administratively exempt business transactions conducted using payment cards such as credit and debit cards, because those transactions would already be reported by the payment processors.

    WHAT’S NEW?

    Reporting on Form 1099 currently applies only generally to certain financial transactions (for example, dividends, interest, sales of securities and loan transactions), targeted transactions (for example, bartering, prizes and qualified plan distributions) and amounts paid to unincorporated businesses—generally understood to be independent contractors—for services. Current law and regulation (Treas. Reg. § 1.6041-3) excludes reporting of most business payments to corporations and governments and for purchases of goods. Payments to tax-exempt organizations should also continue to be exempt from information reporting under the new law. With so much to keep track of, however, it may be easier for many businesses to simply accumulate and report these payments with other vendor transactions rather than identify and segregate them for nonreporting.

    Depending on any relief granted through yet-to-be-published regulations, the new provisions will, as a practical matter, require businesses to track all payments made directly or through their employees or owners. Presumably, they could even include repeated business meals at the same restaurant, office supplies and equipment, or inventory for resale.

    Now is not too soon to start thinking about the massive increase in record-keeping that will be required. Billions of transactions will have to be identified and re-sorted by vendor, summarized, and reported to the IRS by more than 30 million U.S. businesses. Unless the IRS administratively sets exceptions or a de minimis payment amount, businesses will be required to record the taxpayer identification number (TIN) of the payee, or some other unique identifier, for each transaction during the year. Most businesses probably don’t now routinely obtain a TIN for every party from which they make a purchase. The IRS’ TIN matching program allows a payer to validate a TIN against a name electronically, but it’s unclear how much help that will be with vastly more names and TINs to check.

    CPAs can take the lead—both those who serve businesses internally and those who act as outside advisers on tax and accounting—in encouraging businesses that don’t yet have them in place to develop or prepare their systems and procedures for routinely obtaining and recording this data for each transaction. Trying to do so after the fact would be extremely challenging. CPAs can suggest that their employer or clients plan for appropriate modifications to their payment vouchers, expense recording software, and systems for sorting and reporting on expense transactions to capture this information. The information can then be used to generate internal reports and will be readily transferrable to 1099s. Their systems for issuing 1099s will also need to be ready for what could be a many-fold increase in the number of forms issued.

    And what about foreign vendors? It’s unclear whether any relief will be granted with regard to obtaining TINs from overseas vendors that are not as likely as a U.S. vendor to have one. What happens when a traveling executive makes a business trip to Europe or China? Or when a clothing manufacturer imports goods from a dozen different factories in China, after the marketing executives purchased dozens of locally manufactured samples and brought them back to the U.S. for inspection? What’s the most efficient way to uniquely identify the vendors?

    SMALL BUSINESSES

    Increased recordkeeping could weigh particularly heavily on small businesses. Users of small business software do not normally record transactions in a way that would include a re-sorting of all payments made during the year by vendor rather than by expense category, even when this capability is included in the software package. At a minimum, significant amounts of training and extra time to input additional data will be required to provide sift-and-sort capabilities necessary to comply with the new rules. In some cases, entirely new software will be required.

    Ignoring the requirements could lead to expensive penalties for failure to provide information returns. Unless a waiver or other relief is granted, a business could face a $50 penalty under section 6721 for each required information return it fails to file, or that it files with incomplete or incorrect information. For an intentional disregard of the requirement, the penalty could increase to $100 per return or more. Meeting these requirements will, nevertheless, be a far less daunting task for those who plan ahead and who maintain a good expense database from which they can aggregate purchases by vendor and retrieve full vendor information.

    Senate Finance Committee staff who drafted this legislation are reported as characterizing the requirement as a “pay for” to provide $35 billion in tax cuts for small businesses (the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates it will raise $17.1 billion in additional revenue through 2019), but how much will it cost to keep these records? Will the information be worth the cost of gathering it, and just what will the IRS do with it?

    If called upon to identify all revenues by customer, small businesses might lack the resources to prove they did not receive income from customers that used the wrong identification number. The IRS has historically presumed that information reporting is correct and left the burden of proof to the identified recipient. Continuing that presumption in the face of 1099 proliferation could present quite a challenge for smaller businesses with fewer resources to identify all of their revenues by customer.

    CPAs with small business clients have to be proactive to help those clients adapt to these requirements. They can check to make sure clients’ business software has all the tools necessary—or will by 2012—to start accumulating this data and organizing it in real time. And CPAs are going to have to work with software designers to make sure that the required information will easily produce or at least populate government forms.

    In fact, it may be helpful to think of this new reporting regime as similar to payroll accounting. In a sense, the whole world is going on a payroll system starting in 2012. Historically, CPAs have been at the forefront of helping businesses perform payroll processing and tax-related functions, and here is an opportunity for them to lead in providing a valuable service.

    LARGE BUSINESSES

    Large businesses generally maintain so-called vendor or accounts payable ledgers, so they often already track such payments. For them, information reporting could simply involve transferring this information to a Form 1099. Depending on any relief granted, payments to employees as vendors for expense reimbursements could minimize the added burden of accumulating this data for the vendors used by each employee.

    For example, an employee on a business trip might purchase an airline ticket, stay in a hotel, and eat at several restaurants. Technically, the employee is simply a paying agent for the employer, and under the tax law the expenses reimbursed to the employee are expenses of the employer.

    Assume that other employees also use the same airlines, the same hotel and the same restaurant. Literal interpretation of these laws would require the employer to keep track of each vendor used by each employee, aggregate all the payments made by all of its employees, and then report to that airline, hotel or restaurant the sum of all payments made by the company’s employees. Imagine trying to reconcile that Form 1099 with the business records of the vendor, which presumably would also want to make sure the payments reported to the IRS as being made to that business are correct and correspond with gross income reported by the vendor on its income tax return. Business entities with fiscal years will have the added challenge of having to reconcile fiscal year data to calendar-year 1099 reporting. On the receiving end, for the vendor receiving its annual flurry of transaction-related Forms 1099, matching them to its records is another task that could require a CPA’s help.

    RELIEF ON THE HORIZON?

    The trend toward enhanced business information reporting is not new and has drawn increasing attention in Congress over the past few years. Other recent legislation is scheduled to go into effect in 2011 (Housing Assistance Tax Act of 2008) requiring reporting of annual aggregate payment card and third-party network payments to merchants using the proposed Form 1099-K (see IRC § 6050W and REG-139255-08). The regulation writers could provide relief from reporting under section 6041 for transactions reported under the credit card payments provisions of section 6050W, as Shulman indicated in his May 27 speech the IRS plans to do.

    “These transactions will already be covered by reporting requirements on payment card processors, so there is no need for businesses to report them as well,” Shulman said. “So, whenever a business uses a credit or debit card, there will be no new burden under the new law.”

    While exempting all credit or debit card payments is well intended, the relief provision could have a chilling, unintended impact on some small business owners, as also noted by the National Small Business Association. Many small businesses could see their customers vanish as those customers attempt to streamline and minimize the number of vendors requiring additional reporting. Furthermore, there are myriad small businesses that either do not accept credit or debit card payments, or are unable to do so on a competitive basis with larger companies. Balancing the interests of efficiency and all parties within the economy will be a challenging task for the regulation writers.

    While the IRS is expected to provide guidance on the section 6041 requirements, the drafting, exposure and finalization of any regulation of this magnitude typically can take a year or more to complete. We can only hope there will be enough time for the business community to react. Businesses will certainly have a greater chance of making a timely transition if CPAs call their business clients’ attention to the reporting requirements and recommend an immediate assessment of their readiness. Then CPAs also have an opportunity to help business clients implement compliance measures. This new transaction reporting regime looms as a new hurdle for business accounting. It’s a real business-to-business challenge, but who does business better than CPAs?

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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    You know Ryan, my go-to phrase before the 2008 elections was that the dems have the largest tax increases in history planned...and no one listened.

    Now I know a few folks that are saying they can't afford the increases.

    And I'm all out of compassion and pity for them.

    Let them reap what they sow.

    If they survive this - hell if we survive this - maybe they'll learn a lesson.

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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    I recall when the Bush Tax cuts came in. My Weekly take home went up about $36.

    All the liberals around me had selective amnesia about it. I recall it clearly, they said "what tax cut, my paycheck never went up".

    Watch how this one plays out..."What tax increase? My check is the same as it was".
    "Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat."
    -- Theodore Roosevelt


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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    Shut down the irs
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    More taxes, well indirectly, on the way...

    Experts: U.S. Can No Longer Afford Housing Tax Breaks
    August 18, 2010

    Federal housing policy offers the wealthiest Americans billions in tax breaks without delivering much bang for the buck in increased homeownership, critics told government policymakers Tuesday.

    "We aren't getting our money's worth," Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, said at a government conference on reforming housing policy.

    The government spent $230 billion last year to promote homeownership through tax breaks and spending programs. The biggest chunk — $80 billion — went toward the mortgage interest deduction, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

    Michael Stegman, housing policy specialist at the MacArthur Foundation, said the mortgage tax break goes primarily to the wealthiest households. A study this year by the Tax Policy Center of the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute noted that the mortgage deduction was worth just $91 a year to families earning less than $40,000 — and $5,459 a year to those making more than $250,000.

    The government, seeking to overhaul the housing market after the collapse of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is unlikely to touch the politically sacrosanct deduction anytime soon.

    But analysts suggested that the government's debt — $8.8 trillion and growing — meant that housing subsidies might one day face the knife. "We can't afford it," Zandi said.

    The U.S. homeownership rate (66.9%) is about the same as Canada's and is lower than Australia, Ireland, Spain and Britain's even though "these countries provide far less government support for homeownership," Michael Lea of San Diego State University wrote this year.

    For now, the government is neck-deep in housing. Private money has fled the market in the wake of a housing-market meltdown. Fannie, Freddie and other government agencies have filled the gap, guaranteeing more than 90% of new mortgages.

    "Without government guarantees, mortgage rates would be hundreds of basis points higher, resulting in a moribund housing market," said William Gross, managing director of bond fund Pimco. "We don't want government in the housing market, but it's a necessity."

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told the conference "there's no clear consensus yet" on reforming the way mortgages are financed. He promised "fundamental change" in the way Fannie and Freddie do business: They used an implicit government guarantee to borrow cheap money and make big bets in the housing market. When their gamble went bad, taxpayers picked up the tab.

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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    Quote Originally Posted by Ryan Ruck View Post
    More taxes, well indirectly, on the way...
    Quote Originally Posted by Ryan Ruck View Post
    Experts: U.S. Can No Longer Afford Housing Tax Breaks
    "Without government guarantees, mortgage rates would be hundreds of basis points higher, resulting in a moribund housing market," said William Gross, managing director of bond fund Pimco. "We don't want government in the housing market, but it's a necessity."


    Bull - fucking - shit.

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are largely responsible for the mortgage mess.

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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    Quote Originally Posted by Backstop View Post

    Bull - fucking - shit.

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are largely responsible for the mortgage mess.
    Put them in jail, don't tax me more.
    Libertatem Prius!


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    Default Re: Six Months to Go Until The Largest Tax Hikes in History

    Couldn't agree with that more.

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