Wednesday, September 14, 2011
WSJ: The 2013 Tax Cliff
President Obama unveiled part two of his American Jobs Act on Monday, and it turns out to be another permanent increase in taxes to pay for more spending and another temporary tax cut. No surprise there. What might surprise Americans, however, is how the President is setting up the U.S. economy for one of the biggest tax increases in history in 2013.
Mr. Obama said last week that he wants $240 billion in new tax incentives for workers and small business, but the catch is that all of these tax breaks would expire at the end of next year. To pay for all this, White House budget director Jack Lew also proposed $467 billion in new taxes that would begin a mere 16 months from now. The tax list includes limiting deductions for those earning more than $200,000 ($250,000 for couples), limiting tax breaks for oil and gas companies, and a tax increase on carried interest earned by private equity firms. These tax increases would not be temporary.
What this means is that millions of small-business owners had better enjoy the next 16 months, because come January 2013 they are going to get hit with a giant tax bill. Let's call the expensive roll: ...
The White House's economic logic seems to be that its new spending and temporary tax cuts will so fire up investment and hiring in the next 16 months that the economy will be growing much faster in 2013 and could thus absorb a leap off the tax cliff. But this requires its own leap of faith. ...
For the White House, the policy calendar is dictated above all by the political necessities of the 2012 election. Mr. Obama will take his chances on 2013 if he can cajole the private economy to create enough new jobs over the next year to win re-election, even if those jobs and growth are temporary. Business owners and workers who would prefer to prosper beyond Election Day aren't likely to share Mr. Obama's enthusiasm once they see the great tax cliff approaching. Look out below.
https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2011/09/wsj-the-.html
Comments
Obama seems to assume businessmen are blind, stupid, or both. No business in its right mind is going to make additional hiring or expansion plans today, knowing that such a tax hit is just around the corner. So Obama's plan won't even work in the short term.
Posted by: Dana H. | Sep 15, 2011 8:03:16 AM
Does this also include the expiration of the Bush tax rate cuts? If so does this mean he wants to do away with deductions for those making above 200,000 and then let the tax rates go back to pre-Bush levels plus the expiration of the tax incentives discussed above????
Posted by: AT | Sep 15, 2011 7:10:00 AM
"The White House's economic logic seems to be that its new spending and temporary tax cuts will so fire up investment and hiring in the next 16 months that the economy will be growing much faster in 2013 and could thus absorb a leap off the tax cliff. But this requires its own leap of faith. ..."
Lets cut federal salaries, benefits and pensions (including congressional and judicial salaries, pensions and benefits) by $467 bn and call it a targeted tax hike.
As for Obama, he is truly unbelievably stupid. Does he think there is a chance in hell that this new iteration of his stupidity actually has a snowball's chance in hell to pass the house?
Posted by: cubanbob | Sep 15, 2011 6:51:41 AM
i was wondering why businesses weren't hiring.
Posted by: Alan K. Henderson | Sep 15, 2011 5:01:36 PM