Home/Tag: tax increase

President Signs Tax Bill

Before a South Lawn crowd today, President Bush signed into law H.R. 4297, the “Tax Increase Prevention and Reconciliation Act of 2005″. Cumbersome name aside, the bill is a relatively streamlined effort to extend several expiring tax provisions, including the lower tax rates on capital gains and dividends, and middle-class protection from the Alternative Minimum Tax.

S-CORP’s focus now turns to the second tax bill, known in tax circles as the “trailer package”, and the open question of which of the provisions excluded from the first bill will make it into the second (“trailer trash”). S-CORP continues to work with friends

(Read More)

2019-02-06T18:47:19+00:00May 17, 2006|

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

(Read More)

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

IRS TARGETS S CORPS!

As a follow-up to its broader “Tax Gap” study completed earlier this year, the IRS yesterday announced it will engage in a multi-year study of about 5000 taxpayers reporting S corporation income or losses. According to the IRS release (see below), the study “will be used to more accurately gauge the extent to which the income, deductions and credits from S corporations are properly reported on returns filed by the flow through corporations and their shareholders.”

The S Corporation Alliance strongly supports appropriate IRS administration of the tax code, but numerous questions arise from the IRS’s announcement, including why the IRS

(Read More)

2019-02-06T18:48:18+00:00July 26, 2005|