House GOP Pushing to Make Investment-Tax Cuts Retroactive to Jan. 1
March 21 2017 - 01:05PM
Dow Jones News
By Richard Rubin
WASHINGTON -- House Republicans now want to make a cut in
investment taxes retroactive to Jan. 1, arguing that reducing rates
will spur immediate growth.
Republicans contend that repealing a 3.8% investment tax in 2017
-- as opposed to waiting for next January -- would boost business
confidence and encourage investors sitting on unrealized capital
gains to sell now instead of waiting nine months for a lower tax
rate. But the plan would also provide a windfall to any high-income
taxpayer who received investment income already this year.
"This is really critical for the economy," said Rep. Kevin Brady
(R., Texas), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. "The
sooner we can send a signal that those burdens are off you, job
creator, the better."
The proposal, released late Monday night with other changes to
the GOP health-care plan, would accelerate the end of the 3.8% net
investment income tax, a levy created in the 2010 health law and
implemented in 2013. The previous Republican plan called for
repealing the tax in 2018. The tax applies to capital gains,
dividends, interest and other passive income.
"They could have made it retroactive to today's date because
you're clearly not going to change anybody's behavior between Jan.
1 and March 20," said Leonard Burman, a Treasury official under
President Bill Clinton who is now a fellow at the Urban Institute.
"It's a revenue loss to the Treasury that produces no economic
benefit. It's actually pretty bad policy."
The health bill is scheduled for a House vote Thursday. It must
still get through the Senate.
Democrats criticized the accelerated tax cut and said its
inclusion in the health bill revealed Republicans' priorities.
"We need a tax code that is simpler, fairer, provides economic
certainty, and ensures that everyone pays their fair share," said
Rep. Linda Sanchez (D., Calif.) "I don't see how a retroactive tax
break for Wall Street is going to help Main Street families."
The net investment income tax only applies to individuals with
incomes exceeding $200,000 and married couples with incomes over
$250,000. Even within that group, capital income is highly
concentrated and most of the benefits of the tax cut would go to
households with incomes exceeding $1 million, according to the
nonpartisan congressional Joint Committee on Taxation.
As Republicans debated a 2018 repeal, high-income investors had
plenty of reasons to wait to realize capital gains, including
potential cuts in capital-gains rates in the major tax bill to
follow. Under the health bill under consideration, the highest
capital-gains rate would drop to 20% from 23.8%.
Now, the House decision could unlock some of those profits.
"With the market as high as it is, perhaps you would get a
sudden gush of money," said Mark Bloomfield, president of the
American Council for Capital Formation, a Washington group that
argues for lower capital taxation.
The House proposal would also accelerate other tax cuts in the
health bill, including a 0.9% levy on wages above $200,000 for
individuals and $250,000 for married couples. Industrywide fees on
pharmaceuticals and health insurance would also go away. The
so-called Cadillac tax on high-cost health insurance plans would
start in 2026, one year later than in the previous GOP plan.
Capital gains are particularly sensitive to effective dates,
because the wealthiest taxpayers who don't need cash right away can
choose when to realize income. Past experience with capital-gains
rate changes shows taxpayers are particularly sensitive in timing
their asset sales to get favorable tax treatment.
For example, before the top long-term capital-gains rate jumped
from 15% to 23.8% in 2013, taxpayers rushed to take advantage of
the lower rates. Net capital gains increased by 65% from 2011 to
2012 and then dropped 22% in 2013.
The retroactive effective date is a break from Congress' past
practice in cutting capital-gains rates. In 1997 and 2003,
lawmakers announced effective dates during the legislative process.
That approach didn't reward past decisions but didn't make people
delay sales until the bill was signed or until the following
year.
Write to Richard Rubin at richard.rubin@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 21, 2017 12:50 ET (16:50 GMT)
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