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Tax Reform Up Next For Congress E-mail
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

by Harry Rabb, C.P.A.

Special to Tropical Breeze

With the 2008 elections just around the corner, the Congress has initiated dialogue on several key issues. Tax reform, "cap and trade" for carbon emissions and capital markets are some of the hottest topics that DC's politicos are buzzing about. But it is tax reform that is certain to be a high-stakes issue, and one with consequential implications for all.

Introducing tax legislation and minor reform is not a novel endeavor for Congress. In fact, Congress has passed at least one tax bill each year since 2001 and an average of one tax bill each year since 1940. However, the last time major tax reforms took place was when Reagan was President. Working with the Congress, the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA) made drastic changes to the tax code.

For example, the top tax rate was lowered from 50% to 28%, while the bottom rate was raised from 11% to 15% -- the only time in the history of the U.S. income tax that the top rate was reduced and the bottom rate increased concomitantly.

While it seems highly unlikely that this Congress will pass any major tax reform legislation, we have once again reached a point in U.S. history where there is a bipartisan push for significant tax reform.

This bipartisan push, coupled with the fact that the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts are nearing expiration, has set the stage for a major overhaul of the tax code in 2009 or 2010.

But it is House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charlie Rangel's broad tax policy proposal that substantively set the stage for the examination of possible reforms by Congress.

Rangel describes his proposal as the "mother of all tax reforms." It offers a useful glimpse of where tax policy is likely to go in the next Congress if the chairman is allowed to work his will with a more sympathetic resident occupying the White House.

The stated priorities include a permanent solution for the growing burden of the alternative minimum tax (AMT), considering ways of closing the "tax gap" (the shortfall in federal taxes attributable to noncompliance with federal tax laws) and reviewing the effects of the current tax structure on the economy in terms of both individual and corporate taxpayers, and continuing to examine possible reforms, including the repeal of deferral.

In April 2008, the Senate Finance Committee kicked off a series of hearings on tax reform with a look at America's income tax code, and announced plans for future hearings and roundtable sessions to prepare for a comprehensive overhaul of the tax code in 2009.

Future hearings are to include: the taxation of individuals; small business, domestic corporate and pass-through entities; and multinational corporations, with an emphasis on international activities. Moreover, Rangel has indicated that the House Committee on Ways and Means will hold similar hearings in the near future, but hearing dates have yet to be announced. The Senate has said that this year's look at our tax system and reform options should produce a set of principles to guide the work of the committee-and a new presidential administration-on tax reform next year.

The Senate Finance Committee wants to be informed and ready to go in January 2009 and that means they have to work hard now. They have to first understand on a fairly comprehensive basis how the system works today. They have to talk about the natural tensions in tax reform, and what actually happens to working families, to American businesses and to the country's global competitiveness depending on how the tax code is changed.

Enacting a major tax reform bill will be a challenge, especially if the pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) rule is strictly enforced on non-emergency legislation. The PAYGO rule compels new spending or tax changes to not add to the federal deficit.

The next few years should be interesting for legislators, businesses, and taxpayers, indeed.


This information is provided as a public service and should not be construed as individual accounting or tax planning advice. For information on how these general principles apply to your situation, please consult an accounting or tax professional.

Harry Rabb is a C.P.A. and partner in Cormier & Rabb, CPAs, Accounting, Tax and Consulting Services, 28163 U.S. Hwy. 19 N., Ste. 204, Clearwater. Call 727-796-2459.

 

 
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