Republican tax law's pass-through
deduction open to gaming: experts
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[April 25, 2018]
By Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican tax
law's new deduction for pass-through businesses, intended to help small
businesses, was "ill thought through" and will end up benefiting the
wealthy, experts told the U.S. Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday at a
hearing on the law's early impacts.
The tax overhaul, which sailed through the Republican-controlled U.S.
Congress in December without Democratic support, created a new 20
percent deduction for income that owners of so-called pass-through
businesses report on their individual tax returns.
Republicans said the deduction would provide tax relief for the type of
smaller, family-run businesses that would not benefit from the reduction
in the top corporate rate to 21 percent from 35 percent. In a move to
further limit its use by high-income workers, they exempted those in
"services" professions such as law and accounting from qualifying.
But tax professionals and business groups have said the law is unclear.
They have asked the Internal Revenue Service to issue guidance on which
types of business income are eligible for the pass-through deduction.
Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist who heads the American Action Forum, a
conservative think tank, told senators on Tuesday that even once the IRS
weighs in later this year, the pass-through provision drew "haphazard
lines in the sand" that "are the exact kind of lines that tax lawyers
and experts will attempt to try to game."
Democrats have complained that the tax code rewrite favors businesses
and the wealthy, and that working-class taxpayers will see little
benefit. The pass-through provision is just one reason why Republicans
should work with them to rewrite portions of the hastily passed law,
Democratic senators said on Tuesday.
A new analysis from the nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation released
ahead of the hearing was used by Democrats to bolster their argument.
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The JCT estimated that in 2018, more than half of the pass-through
benefit will go to taxpayers making $500,000 or more, with $17.8
billion going to those reporting more than $1 million in income, and
another $3.6 million going to taxpayers earning $500,000 to $1
million.
By 2024, more than 60 percent of the pass-through benefit will go to
taxpayers making $500,000 or more, with $31.6 billion going to those
reporting more than $1 million in income, and another $5.3 million
going to taxpayers earning $500,000 to $1 million, the JCT said.
David Kamin, a New York University School of Law professor, told the
committee the pass-through deduction was "ill thought through" and
"one of the worst provisions that's been added to the tax code in
the last several decades."
But David Cranston, president of Cranston Material Handling
Equipment Corp in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, estimated the
pass-through deduction will save him up to $10,000 annually. He said
it has allowed him to expand into a new product line.
It "put me in a better financial position to self-fund this new
product," Cranston told the committee.
(Reporting by Amanda Becker; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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