CCH Special Tax Briefing Examines Tax Extenders in House Bill

(RIVERWOODS, ILL., December 10, 2009) – Following passage of the Tax Extenders Act of 2009 by the House of Representatives, CCH has issued a Special Tax Briefing on its provisions which, if adopted by the Senate, will provide more certainty to taxpayers and their advisers as they make their financial plans for next year. To read the Briefing, click here.

‘Extender’ legislation often occupies the attention of Congress at this time of year, according to CCH Principal Federal Tax Analyst Mark Luscombe, JD, LLM, CPA.

“There are many provisions in the tax code that officially only have a one- or two-year life, because budget rules would make it very expensive to write them into the code permanently,” Luscombe explained. “This means that Congress either has to extend them each year, or kill tax breaks that many people find appealing.”

The House bill extends several provisions affecting individuals through the 2010 tax year, among them the itemized deduction for state and local sales taxes, the additional standard deduction for state and local real estate property taxes, the above-the-line deduction for qualified tuition and related expenses, the above-the-line teacher’s classroom expenses deduction, the ability to make tax-free distributions from IRAs for charitable purposes and an extension of special provisions on disaster losses first enacted in 2008 as part of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act .

“These are significant provisions that are very popular, but what’s also interesting are some of the expiring provisions that aren’t in this package, namely the partial exclusion of unemployment benefits and the 65-percent COBRA subsidy that were part of this year’s stimulus bill, and any ‘fix’ for the alternative minimum tax in 2010,” Luscombe said. “We’ll have to see how these are addressed in further legislation, such as a ‘jobs’ bill.”

The bill also extends dozens of expiring provisions affecting business, notably the research credit. It pays for the extensions with provisions changing the taxation of carried interest along with heightened information reporting and disclosure requirements for foreign bank and financial accounts.

“Taxing the carried interest of investment fund managers as ordinary income has been proposed as a revenue-raising measure several times in the past, but has never made it through the Senate,” Luscombe noted. “It is usually presented as closing a loophole that benefits a fairly small number of fund managers, but some argue it would affect many more taxpayers than that.”

CCH Tax Briefings

To read the Briefing, click here. Timely, current analysis of other tax legislation can be found at CCH Tax Legislation Coverage

About CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business

CCH, a Wolters Kluwer business (CCHGroup.com) is a leading provider of tax, accounting and audit information, software and services. It has served tax, accounting and business professionals since 1913. Among its market-leading products are The ProSystem fx® Suite, CCH® TeamMate, CorpSystem®, CCH® IntelliConnect™, Accounting Research Manager® and the U.S. Master Tax Guide®. CCH is based in Riverwoods, Ill.

Wolters Kluwer is a leading global information services and publishing company. The company provides products and services for professionals in the health, tax, accounting, corporate, financial services, legal, and regulatory sectors. Wolters Kluwer had 2008 annual revenues of €3.4 billion, employs approximately 20,000 people worldwide, and maintains operations in over 35 countries across Europe, North America, Asia Pacific, and Latin America. Wolters Kluwer is headquartered in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands. Its shares are quoted on Euronext Amsterdam (WKL) and are included in the AEX and Euronext 100 indices. Visit www.wolterskluwer.com for information about our market positions, customers, brands, and organization.

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