Dear Client,
On Friday May 25
President Bush signed into law the emergency war supplemental spending bill
(H.R. 2206) that includes $4.8 billion in small business tax breaks. This
new legislation, designed ostensibly to soothe the burden on small business
of an increase in the minimum wage, contains an assortment of tax relief and
revenue raising provisions. Here are the main tax provisions under the new
Act.
Tax breaks in the small
business tax package:
The tax relief provisions in the small business tax package:
-
Extend and
liberalize the work opportunity tax credit.
The credit is extended for 3.5 years with liberalized rules for
hiring disabled veterans and workers in rural renewal counties.
-
Extend and enhance
Section 179
small business expensing.
The (Code Sec. 179) expensing limit is increased to $125,000 and the
investment-based expensing phase-out is increased to $500,000,
effective for tax years beginning after 2006, and the enhanced
expensing provision is extended for another year (through 2010).
-
Extend and enhance
certain GO Zone tax incentives.
The small business expensing rules allowed for GO Zone businesses
(i.e., $100,000 higher expensing limit and $600,000 higher phase-out
point) are extended for one year (through 2008) for small businesses
in the hardest hit area of the GO Zone. Also, the low-income housing
credit rules for buildings in the GO Zones are extended and
expanded, and the bond financing rules for repairs and
reconstructions of residences in the GO Zones are modified.
-
Enhance the tip
credit for certain small businesses.
The Federal minimum wage level for purposes of calculating the tip
credit is frozen, thereby allowing restaurants to continue claiming
the full tip credit despite an increase in the Federal minimum wage.
-
Simplify family
business tax. An
unincorporated business that is jointly owned by a married couple in
a common law state is permitted to file as a sole proprietorship
(under prior law, unless the married couple was located in a
community property state, both the married couple and the business
were subject to penalties for failing to file as a partnership). The
new law also ensures that both spouses receive credit for paying
Social Security and Medicare taxes.
-
Waive individual
and corporate AMT limitations on work opportunity tax credits and
tip credits. Prior
law limited a small business' ability to claim the work opportunity
tax credit and the tip credit by imposing a limitation that such
credits could not be used to offset taxes that would be imposed
under the alternative minimum tax (AMT). The new law provides a
permanent waiver of the individual and corporate AMT limitations for
the work opportunity tax credit and the tip credit.
-
Liberalize several
S corporation rules.
The new law contains several provisions beneficial to S
corporations, including measures that:
-
Redefine “passive investment
income” for purposes of S corporation revocation rules to
exclude gains from the sale or exchange of stock or
securities as an item of passive investment income.
-
Exclude restricted bank
director stock from treatment as S corporation stock.
-
Set forth a special accounting
rule for banks that become S corporations and that change
from the reserve method of accounting for bad debts.
-
Revise the tax treatment of
sales of stock of wholly-owned subsidiaries of S
corporations.
-
Eliminate pre-1983 earnings and
profits arising during an S corporation year, regardless of
whether the corporation was an S corporation in its first
taxable year beginning after December 31, 1996.
-
Permit an electing small
business trust (ESBT) to deduct interest expense it incurs
when it borrows funds to purchase S corporation stock.
Revenue provisions
(offsets):
The Act pays for the above benefits by:
... Raising the kiddie tax age from under-18 to
under-19 (under-24 if a student).
... Modifying the rule that IRS must stop charging interest and filing
related penalties if it fails to notify the taxpayer about a deficiency
within 18 months after the taxpayer filed the return-the time limit is
extended to 36 months.
... Eliminating the requirement that IRS hold a
collection due process hearing before issuing a levy on delinquent
employment taxes.
... Expanding preparer penalties to all types
of tax returns (e.g., employment, excise, exempt orgs., estate and gift tax)
and increasing the penalty amounts.
... Creating a new penalty on claims for refund
that are filed without any reasonable basis.
... Increasing the penalty for bad checks and money orders.
Please
keep in mind that we've described only the highlights of the most important
changes in the new law. Give us a call at your earliest convenience for more
details on how you may be affected by this important tax legislation.