December 9, 2009
Obama Proposes Small Business Tax Help
President Obama has proposed creating a tax incentive for small businesses that hire new employees even as Congress tries to figure out how such a deal would work.
There is no question that creating a tax incentive for small businesses that hire workers or increase payroll would help the economy.
Lawmakers on Capitol Hill have been working for months on ways to develop small business tax incentives and give small businesses tax help in a way that it won’t be abused.
Obama and Congress have both been vague on how the tax break would work and how it would be administered.
“I believe it’s worthwhile to create a tax incentive to encourage small businesses to add and keep employees and I’m going to work with Congress to pass one,” Obama said.
With the 2009 year ending, Congress is running out of time to pass a jobs package this year, and the process will be even more complicated if the administration doesn’t come up with details. Moreover, the Senate is preoccupied with the health care debate, making any action less likely.
The Obama administration is expected to propose extensions and enhancements tax credits and tax breaks that were part of the federal economic stimulus package passed in early 2008.
Obama also proposed eliminating capital gains taxes on small business stock, if it is purchased in 2010 and held for at least five years, expanding a tax break enacted in the stimulus package.
While Obama and the Democrats focus on health care reform, Republicans believe the focus should be on getting Americans back to work. Unemployment rates currently stand at 10 percent.
Tax experts ponder how a small business tax break for hiring working would work. Do you give a tax break just for hiring more employees, or do companies have to simply increase payroll? How long do the companies keep the workers? How do you enforce the requirements?
“You’re trying to subsidize people for doing things they wouldn’t otherwise do, but we don’t know what they would otherwise do,” said Eugene Steuerle, a Treasury Department official in the Reagan administration who is now co-director of the Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank.
John H. Bishop, an economist and a professor at Cornell University, has a proposal for extend tax credits to companies that increase payroll subject to Social Security taxes. Since only the first $108,600 of a worker’s pay is subject to Social Security taxes, executives couldn’t get the credit by giving themselves big bonuses, he said.
Bishop’s small business tax credit proposal would help the economy if companies either raise the pay of existing workers or hire new workers. Bishop’s proposal, modeled after a similar tax credit enacted in the 1970s, has been circulating on Capitol Hill for several months.
“It does exactly what we want,” Bishop said. “It focuses on hiring Americans to work now.”
source: The Associated Press 2009
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President Obama’s treasury secretary and chief economic adviser admit they cannot rule out raising taxes on middle-class Americans to curb the soaring budget deficit and fund health care reform.
With more federal spending expected on the economic stimulus package, extended unemployment benefits and health care reform, revenue sources to cover these expenses just aren’t available.
The Obama administration is treading lightly on the issue of raising of taxes to calm the public. Both Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and National Economic Council Director Larry Summers sidestepped questions on the President’s intentions about taxes. Geithner said the White House was not ready to rule out a tax hike to address the federal deficit; Summers said Obama’s proposed health care overhaul needs funding from somewhere.
President Obama vowed “you will not see any of your taxes increase one single dime” during his presidential campaign. But the simple truth is the federal spending on economic recovery combined with an ambitious plan to revamp American health care - will have to be paid for.
On Friday, the government released a report that suggests the worst U.S. recession since WWII appears to be ending. But President Obama cautioned about a quick turnaround.
“Well, as I’ve said, I think we maybe are beginning to see the end of the recession, but it’s still going to be some time before we are seeing companies hiring again. That’s usually the last thing that happens,” Obama said in an interview with Univision that aired on Sunday.
“So I think we are still going to have a tough remainder of the year — probably until next year — but, you know, at least what we are seeing — we’ve pulled back from the possibility of a depression. That’s not the danger.”
Private economic forecasters suggest that unemployment will come down in the second quarter of 2010 with positive growth in the latter half of 2009.
But at the same time, Geithner and administration officials are pondering how to ask Congress for more funds to extend unemployment benefits for Americans who have recently lost their jobs. The proposal drew some support from Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., as long as the benefits come from the already approved economic stimulus package.
Opponents of the plan question whether the proposal will benefit the country.
Senator John McCain stated, “I think it’s pretty clear, if you pump trillions of dollars into the economy, you will see some recovery,” the Arizona Republican said while giving Obama credit for the improvement. “But the long-term consequences, I think, are going to be, unfortunately, devastating unless we do something about it.”
Geithner and Greenspan appeared on ABC’s “This Week.” Summers appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” and CBS’s “Face the Nation.” DeMint was interviewed on “Fox News Sunday.” McCain spoke with CNN’s “State of the Union.”
source: Associate Press
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November 3, 2008
Is It The Obama or McCain Tax Plan - You Make The Call
I have been looking at the tax plans for both presidential candidates. I believe that both have good ideas and bad ideas. But it’s fair to say that we really don’t know if either of them will work.
It is true that Barack Obama’s plan is focused more on helping the “common man”, by providing tax relief to middle America - but at what expense?
Will a measly $1,000 a year really make the difference? How are we going to pay for it? The national deficit is growing at an alarming rate and additional tax cuts will just add to it. This could have long term devastating effects on the economy and the value of the once “almighty dollar”.
On the other hand, John McCain’s tax plan calls for giving big business and the highest earners the larger tax cuts. The “trickle down economics” of the republican plan doesn’t sit well with most Americans. But let’s be fair - it had worked in the past (some will obviously disagree).
So what is the right course to take on tax reform? Everyone has ideas, but no one knows for sure. I believe that giving the middle and lower classes a tax break can help the “psychology” of America. It can help average folks feel like there is a future - that this economic crisis can be turned around.
The Obama plan calls for promoting and supporting domestic small businesses and that is great for America. I believe that John McCain feels that same way, but he hasn’t really come across as the savior for the middle class.
I think both candidates agree that Alternative Minimum Tax must be eliminated. The tax reforms of 2001 expire in 2010 and AMT will tax more than 20 million Americans, if it is not changed.
John McCain’s plan calls for cutting the corporate tax rate to 25%, down 10% from the current 35%. But will that only help big business?
Both candidates agree in health care reform. But again, it will cost trillions, yes trillions of dollars in the long run. Can we afford it - can we afford not to do it?
The bottom line is this: We won’t know what will work until a new president is elected,and the tax plan has time to mature.
I hate to say it - but most Americans want immediate gratification and middle class Americans deserve something to look forward to. The John McCain plan sounds great for big business and the wealthy - but what about the rest of us?
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October 30, 2008
OBAMA-NABLE - Obama Infomercial Sells America
Barack Obama took America by storm tonight. His $3,000,000,000 infomercial may have signaled the end of John McCain’s dream to become Commander-In_Chief of the United States of America.
Obama’s charisma, looks and passion were evident in his 30 minute, prime-time pitch, of why he should be the next president. His “top-seller” certainly has put the pressure on McCain. And with only a few days, it may be too late for McCain and his supporters.
I would have loved to be a “fly on the wall”, where ever John McCain was at the time of Obama’s speech. I can even imagine what he was thinking.
It’s unfortunate that a person’s public perception overshadows, hides or even exaggerates what someone is all about. Not to say that Obama represents any of those notions, but Americans are in love with appearance - and Obama’s got it!
Barack’s speech was aimed at showing how he empathizes with the American middle and lower class Americas. Without any reference to his opponent, he painted a picture of how the middle class is taking the punishment of the economic downturn and decisions made by the current Administration. Obama used personal stories of struggling Americans to prove his point that it’s time for a change - time for completely new approach to making America great again. And doing it not by trickle down economics, but a shift in perception that it’s the middle class that makes this country what it is.
Obama talked about how his mom, who fought a battle with breast cancer, dealt with the difficulties she had with her insurance company. The reference was aimed to help viewers understand why his health care reform program is what it is.
Tonight, John McCain seemed a distant memory. However he talked emphatically how the infomercial was excessive. He pointed out the fact that the infomercial bumped back the World Series on Fox by 15 minutes. “No one will delay the World Series with an infomercial when I’m president,” he said, in Hershey, Pa.
Obama and his advisers shrugged it off. They made the point that many Americans have over 150 channels and therefore, plenty of other choices. Or they could play video games.
Is there still a chance for John McCain? As a true American hero, you can never count him out. He is a fighter, and he’s been down before. Whatever the outcome of the election, John McCain is a true America hero, who fought for our freedom and endured capture and torture at the hands of our enemies. Even if John McCain loses - he is still a winner - and a true American - as American as you can get!
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