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Clinton signs limited tax relief
into law
By Kay
Bell Bankrate.com
Lawmakers gathered at the Franklin D. Roosevelt
memorial Dec. 17 to watch President Clinton sign into law a collection
of tax provisions.
The memorial to the polio-stricken president
was chosen for the ceremony because the taxes are part of the larger
Ticket to Work bill, which includes measures to safeguard disabled
workers.
The bill's key tax component provides relief
to families who otherwise might have paid higher taxes because they
claim popular child tax credits.
The limited tax package, passed just before
Congress recessed for the year, also offers tax breaks for businesses
that provide educational assistance to employees, those that conduct
research and development programs, and first-time homebuyers in
Washington, D.C. On the other side, those who file estimated tax
returns quarterly might be paying more because of the bill.
Credit
where due
The tax bill will allow an estimated 1 million taxpayers to continue
to claim, at least temporarily, the $500-per-child tax credit without
being exposed to the higher alternative minimum tax rate.
The alternative minimum tax is a separate tax
computation, with its own brackets and rates. In figuring the alternative
tax, deductions that reduce the amount a taxpayer owes under the
regular tax are not allowed, producing a larger tax liability.
The alternative minimum tax was devised originally
to nail high-income individuals who use credits and incentives to
avoid tax bills. But it is not adjusted for inflation annually,
and the strong and steady growth of the economy during the past
decade has pushed many taxpayers into its clutches.
The measure now will protect these unintended
child tax credit victims from the alternative minimum tax until
Dec. 31, 2001, by allowing them to use the credit against the alternative
tax as well as the regular tax. Other popular tax credits that also
will be given this three-year relief are:
- Hope Scholarship credit for freshman or sophomore
college students.
- Lifetime Learning credit for education beyond
initial university years.
- Child and Dependent Care credit for help
in looking after family members.
Unsafe
harbor for quarterly filers
Taxpayers who file quarterly estimated taxes, however, are not as
lucky. Rather than getting a tax break, their tax liability is increasing
for the next three years.
Quarterly tax filing generally is used by taxpayers
who have no or little withholding income; for example, people who
work for several different employers on a contract basis and whose
incomes fluctuate throughout the year. If you end up owing more
than $1,000 when you file your final tax return, you could be hit
with a penalty. One way to avoid the penalty is to meet a "safe
harbor" payment amount: either 90 percent of what you ultimately
will owe this year, or a percentage of the taxes you paid last tax
year.
Many quarterly payers use the last-year's tax
percentage method because it allows them the certainty of knowing
exactly what they must pay instead of taking the chance that their
estimated final tax is too far off the mark.
The bill will raise the prior year percentage
from 105 percent now to 108.6 percent in 2000 and 110 percent in
2001.
Business
extended tax breaks
Along with the provisions affecting individual taxpayers, the House
and Senate agreed on several business-tax extensions. Most of the
business provisions expired in June, and the bill extends many of
them until the end of 2001.
Business-tax extensions include:
- Research and development credits would continue
through June 30, 2004, and increase incrementally. Additionally,
this credit would now be available for the first time to companies
conducting research in Puerto Rico and other U.S. possessions.
- Employers who provided undergraduate-level
educational aid for their employees would be able to continue
to take a credit through Dec. 31, 2001.
- Credits would continue through Dec. 31, 2001,
for electricity produced by alternative sources such as wind and
manure recycling, but the House does not address this issue.
- Welfare-to-Work and Work Opportunity tax
credits would continue through Dec. 31, 2001, for businesses that
hire under these programs' guidelines.
Specific
tax situations covered
Several specific geographic and circumstantial tax considerations
also are addressed in the extenders bill.
- First-time homebuyers in the District of
Columbia can continue to claim a credit on their taxes if they
purchase a residence in the nation's capital before Dec. 31, 2001.
- Officials in two U.S. island possessions
now can raise a toast to the higher taxes they will get for liquor
produced there. The excise tax on rum from Puerto Rico and the
U.S. Virgin Islands will increase from $10.50 to $13.25, retroactively
from July 1, 1999, when the bill expired, and continue through
2001.
- And in case you find that you can't file
your taxes on time because your computer crashed when the year
2000 rolled around, the bill instructs the IRS to give you a break.
The IRS can postpone, on a taxpayer-by-taxpayer basis, certain
deadlines for up to 90 days in cases of Y2K-related failures.
Incomplete
tax grade
Even some legislators argue, however, that Congress should receive
an "incomplete" on its tax report card. While the extender
tax measures -- 27 in all -- -- are critical to many individuals
and businesses, the bill is far short of the ambitious tax cuts
included in the vetoed Financial Freedom Act.
Initially, Congress tried to salvage some tax
parts of the doomed measure by including tax provisions in the bills
that had to be approved to keep government offices running for the
2000 fiscal year, which began Oct. 1. Then tax proposals were moved
to other legislation that Congress hoped to finish as it waited
out the budget resolution.
But with a budget deadline looming, House and
Senate leaders announced that measures containing thorny tax issues
will have to wait until the next session. These include the tax
breaks associated with health care reform, trade legislation and
revision of bankruptcy laws, as well as a bill to increase the minimum
wage by $1 over three years and cut taxes by $30 billion over five
years.
--Posted Dec. 17, 1999
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