Deja vu All Over Again
Sunday, December 19, 2010 at 04:20PM
Judith Herron-Arango in 2010 Taxes, 2010_tax_law, new_tax_law, taxes

So Congress did come through with tax legislation at the last minute.  Here’s my summary of highlights from the legislation.



For “wage slaves” like myself there is the reduction in payroll taxes from 6.2% to 4.2% for 2011.  According to the Tax Foundation this will result in a $1,500 reduction in taxes paid for a couple earning $75,000. The maximum savings available up to income of $106,800 is $2,316.

Many of the tax breaks due to expire, will now continue.  These include a basket of incoherent incentives to engage or abstain from certain behaviors in the marketplace.  The list includes, but is not limited to:

For individuals:

-     Extensions of the dependent-care credit and the adoption tax credit.  The adoption tax credit was made refundable through 2011 in the health care legislation.  This tax bill moves that feature into 2012 as well.

-      Teachers still get up to $250 “above-the-line” deduction for buying supplies for their classrooms.

-      Through 2012, you can still:   apply for The American Opportunity tax credit for education, use the exclusion for employer-paid education, and deduct your student loan interest.

For businesses:

-      The R& D credit is in place now through 2011.

-      The special 15-year cost recovery for certain leasehold, restaurant and retail improvements remains.

-      Expansion of bonus depreciation to 100% for new assets placed in service starting September 9, 2010 through 2011.  We’ll go back to 50% for bonus depreciation for 2012.  Then it is supposed to go away permanently. 

-   Speaking of Section 179 – earlier legislation passed this year will let you take up to $500,000 in expense for capital assets this year and next.  Unlike bonus depreciation, the Sec. 179 deduction is also available for used assets.

For everyone:

The AMT patch was passed, so the 2010 exemption will be $47,450 for individuals and $72,450 for joint filers.

The estate tax is back with a 35% rate and a $5 million lifetime exclusion.  It can be applied retroactive to January 1, 2010, or estates of 2010 decedents can elect the previous 2010 rules, with no estate tax but a limited step up in the basis of inherited assets.

For me to do next:

Now that this bill has passed I have no more excuses.  If Congress can meet an end-of-year deadline, then it’s really pathetic if I can’t do the same.  Time to get to work on the New Year’s Resolution list….

 

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