Gordon Gray March 25, 2020
Executive Summary
·
The CARES Act includes
substantial – in excess of $300 billion – individual rebates, among other
relief provisions.
·
The Act also includes
nine business tax provisions, including a credit to retain workers during
COVID-19 -related closures, a change to the tax treatment of business losses,
delays in payroll tax payments, and some technical corrections to the Tax Cuts
and Jobs Act.
·
Combined, the individual
and business tax provisions provide a substantial fiscal response to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Introduction
On March 25, the Senate considered a revised “phase 3” of the
legislative response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
Economic Security (CARES) Act. The Act includes forgivable loans to small
businesses, direct payments and tax relief for individuals, tax relief for
businesses, financial assistance for vulnerable industries, additional health
funding and policy, and additional assistance for financial markets. With respect
to the tax provisions, the bill provides direct payments, among other
provisions, to individuals at a time when millions of Americans will likely
face disruptions to their employment. The bill also provides business tax
relief, including a new tax credit to incentivize firms to retain employees, a
delay of payroll tax payments, as well as a number of adjustments and technical
corrections to changes made by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).
Individual Tax Provisions
Direct Payments
The CARES Act provides one-time direct payment
to individuals and families. For individuals with incomes up to $75,000, the
Act provides a $1,200 payment, phasing out at a rate of $5 for every $100 in
income above $75,000. The payment is thus phased out entirely for an individual
making $99,000. Married couples with combined incomes up to $150,000 would
receive $2,400, subject to the same phaseout as that applying to individuals.
Thus, for married couples making $198,000, the payment would be phased out. The
provision also provides an additional $500 per child, though also subject to
phaseout. Eligibility and benefit levels would be based on 2019 income tax
filings, where possible. 2018 tax data and Social Security data can be used in
lieu of 2019 data if it is unavailable. Individuals will not be required to
repay any overpayment when filing their 2020 taxes.
For individuals and families with low or zero
net tax liabilities, including the disabled, the full benefit is refundable,
which means that taxpayers with no income or income tax liability are eligible
to receive the credit – a key change from the initial draft.
According to the Internal Revenue Services’
Statistics of Income, there were about 120
million taxpayers with tax returns in those income brackets in
2017. According to the Tax Foundation, this policy will cost in excess of $300
billion.
Additional Income Tax Provisions
In addition to the direct payments, the Act
provides additional relief to individuals and families. Additionally,
consistent with other disasters, the Act waives the 10 percent early withdrawal
penalty for qualifying individuals, who may withdraw up to $100,000 from
retirement accounts without facing penalty. The Act provides for flexible tax treatment
of that withdrawal and allows taxpayers to restore any withdrawn funds. The Act
waives required minimum distribution rules for retirement accounts, preventing
retirees from having to sell retirement assets during the downtown. The Act
would enhance charitable giving by providing individuals with a new $300
above-the-line deduction on charitable donation and increasing previously
enacted limitations on charitable deductions. Last, the Act creates a new
incentive that allows employers to provide up to $5,250 annually toward
employee student loan payments on a tax-free basis for one year.
Business Provisions
The Act contains nine major business relief tax
provisions that broadly hew to three categories: direct tax relief to
businesses, relief from certain TCJA provisions, and technical corrections to
the TCJA. The Act creates a new tax credit to incentivize firms to retain their
workforce, which is available through the end of the year. This provision
provides employers with a refundable tax credit equal to 50 percent of employee
compensation (inclusive of health insurance) up to $10,000 per employee.
Employers with greater than 100 employees are eligible to receive the credit if
they have been closed due to the coronavirus. Employers with fewer than 100
employees may receive the credit whether they are closed are not.
The Act allows employers (including the
self-employed) to delay the payment of the employer portion of the Social
Security payroll tax. Under current law, employers pay a 6.2 percent rate
on covered employee payroll. Under the proposal, employers would be able to
defer the payment for the remainder of the year and pay back the liability over
the next two years. The Social Security trust fund would be made whole from the
reduced payments with a general fund transfer – essentially additional
borrowing. The Committee For a Responsible Federal Budget estimated that the
cost of these forgone payments would amount to $275 billion, but under this provision those
payments would ultimately be restored in future years.
The Act also provides businesses with additional
tax relief by temporarily unwinding some of the revenue-raising reforms in the
TCJA. One such reform was the limitation on net operating losses. Prior to the
enactment of the TCJA, firms could deduct net operating losses (NOLs) to smooth
out income tax payments both in the recent past (two years) and in the future.
The TCJA eliminated the ability of firms to “carry-back” losses and offset
prior years’ income taxes, and thus receive a rebate. The TCJA further limited
the share of taxable income that can be offset by NOLs. The proposal would
allow businesses to carry-back an NOL from 2018, 2019, or 2020 for 5 years –
thus a firm could use a loss realized in 2020 to reduce a tax liability as far
back as 2015. The proposal also eliminates the income limitation on the
deduction for losses in 2020. The Act also includes a provision extending this
tax treatment of losses to pass-through entities. Combined, these provisions
are designed to enhance firms’ liquidity during the COVID-19 crisis.
The CARES Act proposes to temporarily unwind two
additional TCJA provision. The TCJA eliminated the corporate alternative
minimum tax (AMT). Payment of the corporate AMT had generated credit against
future payments. When the corporate AMT was repealed, these credits – $10.2 billion – were made refundable over
the next several years. The CARES Act allows firms to accelerate recovery of
these payments. Last, the Act would loosen one of the larger revenue raisers in
the TCJA. Prior to the TCJA, firms could deduct interest on loans. The TCJA
reduced the deductibility of interest to 30 percent of a firm’s taxable income,
raising about $250 billion over the next 10 years. The CARES Act would relax
that limitation to 50 percent for tax years 2019 and 2020.
The CARES Act includes a technical correction to
the TCJA. Specifically, the Act would correct an error that requires certain firms
to depreciate investment over a longer period than was intended by Congress. As
a technical correction, this provision does not have a “scorable” cost.
The final version of the Act includes a new
provision that would exempt manufacturers from the federal excise tax on
alcohol for the remainder of the year if that alcohol is being used to make
hand sanitizer.
Last, the CARES Act suspends the collection of
all federal excise taxes on commercial aviation, including those on tickets,
cargo, and aviation fuel until 2021.
Conclusion
The final CARES Act is the third phase of
Congress’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to other major
interventions, the Act provides significant tax relief – including at least
$300 billion in payments to individuals and families. The CARES Act provides
significant administrative and liquidity enhancements for firms. While the
costs are substantial, this is likely not the last fiscal intervention Congress
will need to enact as the United States grapples with the current crisis.
https://www.americanactionforum.org/insight/tax-provisions-in-the-coronavirus-aid-relief-and-economic-security-cares-act-final-version/#ixzz6HoRbhTHi
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