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House Approves $70 Billion Tax Cut Bill

Yesterday, by a vote of 244-185, the House approved the long-delayed tax reconciliation bill (H.R. 4297) following an agreement between House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas (R-CA) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) that a follow-up tax extenders bill may be attached to pension reform legislation.

The reconciliation tax bill includes a two-year extension of the reduced tax rate on capital gains and dividends, a one-year extension of alternative minimum tax relief for middle-income tax payer, a two-year extension of increased small-business expensing under section 179, and extension of the subpart F exemption for active financing income.

Fourteen

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2019-02-06T18:47:20+00:00May 11, 2006|

No Agreement on H.R. 4297

House and Senate tax writers failed to reach an agreement this week on a final tax reconciliation conference report (H.R. 4297), despite earlier predictions that a final bill would be unveiled this week. It appears that the final bill will include both the AMT relief the Senate wants and the extension of the lower rates on investment income the House wants, as well as provisions necessary to cover the out-year revenue losses of the lower rates. According to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Grassley, these items add up to $74 billion over five years, $4 billion more than the budget limit.

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2019-02-06T18:47:20+00:00April 28, 2006|

Tax Relief Bill Negotiations Proceed

Today’s Congress Daily includes a number of points about the conference between House and Senate negotiators:

  • “One source said April 25 it appears House negotiators will be willing to accept at least some of the offsets that were included in the Senate’s bill.”
  • “It also appears that negotiators are simultaneously working out the details of a second bill of tax break extenders that will be dropped from the reconciliation bill, the source said.”
  • “Pressure from the leadership and administration remains on conferees, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) said April 24, but he added that it was unclear whether a deal could

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2019-02-06T18:47:20+00:00April 26, 2006|

IRS Considering More S Corp Guidance

The 2004 American Jobs Creation Act contained numerous S Corp friendly provisions, including increasing the number of allowable S Corp shareholders from 75 to 100 and expanding the definition of a single shareholder to include large families.

According to BNA, the IRS is actively considering issuing additional guidance for some of the provisions (Sections 231 through 240 of the bill), including additional guidance on Section 231 of the Act, which defines which members of a family may be treated as a single S corporation shareholder. This additional guidance was part of the IRS’s business plan for 2005/2006 business year, which ends

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2019-02-06T18:47:20+00:00April 20, 2006|

S-CORP and Congressional Small Business Advocates Continue Push for b�Sting Taxb� Relief

Congress has returned from a weeklong recess and once again will attempt to finish last year’s tax business: a $70 billion tax cut bill (the “reconciliation” bill) and a pension reform bill. The S Corporation Association (“S-CORP”) continues to work with congressional tax-writers to include a Senate-passed provision to provide “sting tax” relief for S corporations subject to double taxation at the highest corporate rate in the tax reconciliation bill. S-CORP salutes Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) for leading a bicameral and bipartisan letter that was sent last night to the House and Senate conferees.

The letter urges House and Senate conferees

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2019-02-06T18:47:20+00:00March 28, 2006|