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Wednesday, July 23, 2025

New tax law packed with obscure business cuts

by

20101224

WASH­ING­TON-The mas­sive new tax bill signed in­to law by Pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma is filled with all kinds of hol­i­day stock­ing stuffers for busi­ness­es: tax breaks for pro­duc­ing TV shows, grants for putting up wind­mills, rum sub­si­dies for Puer­to Ri­co and the Vir­gin Is­lands. There is even a tax break for peo­ple who buy race hors­es. Mil­lions of home­own­ers, how­ev­er, might feel like they got a lump of coal. Home­own­ers who don't itemise their de­duc­tions will lose a tax break for pay­ing lo­cal prop­er­ty tax­es. The busi­ness tax breaks are part of sweep­ing leg­is­la­tion that ex­tends Bush era tax cuts for fam­i­lies at every in­come lev­el through 2012.

Oba­ma signed the $858 bil­lion mea­sure a week ago. It al­so pro­vides a new pay­roll tax cut for wage earn­ers and ex­tends job­less ben­e­fits to the long-term un­em­ployed. Most of the busi­ness tax breaks-about 50 in al-are part of a pack­age that ex­pires each year, cre­at­ing un­cer­tain­ty for tax plan­ners but lots of busi­ness for lob­by­ists. Many of these tax breaks have been around for years but ex­pired at the end of 2009 be­cause law­mak­ers couldn't agree how to pay for them. The new law ex­tends most of them through 2011, some through 2012. They will be paid for with bor­rowed mon­ey. Near­ly 1,300 busi­ness­es and trade groups formed a coali­tion urg­ing Con­gress to ex­tend the busi­ness tax breaks. Oth­ers lob­bied for spe­cif­ic pro­vi­sions, in­clud­ing a gen­er­ous tax cred­it for re­search and de­vel­op­ment and sub­si­dies to pro­duce al­ter­na­tive en­er­gy.

There is a gen­er­ous tax break for banks and in­sur­ance com­pa­nies that in­vest over­seas, a tax cred­it for rail­road track main­te­nance, more gen­er­ous write-offs for up­grad­ing mo­tor­sport race tracks, and in­creased de­duc­tions for busi­ness­es that do­nate books and com­put­ers to pub­lic schools and li­braries.

Many of the tax breaks are de­signed to en­cour­age eco­nom­ic ac­tiv­i­ty. But pass­ing them each year at the last minute, or skip­ping a year and pass­ing them retroac­tive­ly, isn't ter­ri­bly ef­fi­cient, said Clint Stretch, a tax ex­pert at De­loitte Tax LLP.

"It gives it a lot of dig­ni­ty to call it a 'sys­tem,'" Stretch said. Every year, tax­pay­ers risk los­ing their fa­vorite tax breaks, if they are not re­newed. That's what hap­pened to mil­lions of home­own­ers. For 2008 and 2009, home­own­ers who didn't itemise their de­duc­tions were able to get an ex­tra de­duc­tion-on top of the stan­dard de­duc­tion-for pay­ing lo­cal prop­er­ty tax­es. In­di­vid­u­als could re­duce their tax­able in­come by as much as $500, cou­ples could cut theirs by $1,000. The pro­vi­sion, which has saved home­own­ers about $1.6 bil­lion a year, ex­pired for 2010 and was left out of the new tax law.

Tax­pay­ers who itemise will con­tin­ue to be able to deduct lo­cal prop­er­ty tax­es. About two-thirds of tax fil­ers don't itemise.

Among the pro­vi­sions in the new law:

A tax break that al­lows prof­itable com­pa­nies to write off large cap­i­tal ex­pen­di­tures im­me­di­ate­ly-rather than over time-giv­ing some com­pa­nies huge tax shel­ters. The tax break, known as bonus de­pre­ci­a­tion, ben­e­fits au­tomak­ers, util­i­ties, heavy equip­ment mak­ers like Cater­pil­lar Inc, and John Deere, air freight com­pa­nies like Fedex Corp, and wire­less com­pa­nies like Ver­i­zon and AT&T, said Anne Math­ias, di­rec­tor of re­search for the Wash­ing­ton Re­search Group, which pro­vides re­search to in­sti­tu­tion­al and cor­po­rate in­vestors. It will save com­pa­nies near­ly $21 bil­lion over the next decade.The tax break is al­so avail­able to peo­ple who buy race hors­es and farm­ers who buy cat­tle for breed­ing or dairy, ac­cord­ing to a de­pre­ci­a­tion list pro­duced by the In­ter­nal Rev­enue Ser­vice.

An ex­emp­tion that al­lows banks, in­sur­ance com­pa­nies and oth­er fi­nan­cial firms to shield for­eign prof­its from be­ing taxed by the US through 2011. Cost: $9.2 bil­lion. The tax break is im­por­tant to ma­jor multi­na­tion­al banks and fi­nan­cial firms, such as Cit­i­group, Bank of Amer­i­ca, Gold­man Sachs and Mor­gan Stan­ley, and to the fi­nanc­ing op­er­a­tions of oth­er in­ter­na­tion­al com­pa­nies, Math­ias said.

A tax cred­it for re­search and de­vel­op­ment, ben­e­fit­ing a wide range of in­dus­tries, in­clud­ing phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal and high tech com­pa­nies. The law ex­tends the tax cred­it through 2011, at a cost of $13.3 bil­lion.

In­creased tax re­bates to Puer­to Ri­co and the Vir­gin Is­lands from a tax on rum im­port­ed in­to the Unit­ed States. The US im­pos­es a $13.50 per proof-gal­lon tax on im­port­ed rum, and sends most of the pro­ceeds to the two US ter­ri­to­ries. Pre­vi­ous­ly, the re­bate was $10.50 a gal­lon. The new law ex­tends a more gen­er­ous re­bate of $13.25 a gal­lon through 2011. Cost: $262 mil­lion.

Ex­tends a grant pro­gram for the pro­duc­tion of wind, so­lar and oth­er re­new­able en­er­gy through 2011. Cost: $3 bil­lion.

Ex­tends a 50 per cent tax cred­it for ex­pens­es re­lat­ed to rail­road track main­te­nance through 2011. Cost $331 mil­lion.

En­hanced de­duc­tions for com­pa­nies that do­nate food to the needy, books to pub­lic schools or com­put­ers to pub­lic li­braries, through 2011. Cost: $537 mil­lion.

A tax break that al­lows TV and movie pro­duc­tions to more quick­ly write off ex­pens­es, ex­tend­ed through 2011. Sex­u­al­ly ex­plic­it pro­duc­tions are in­el­i­gi­ble. Cost: $101 mil­lion. (AP)


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