As the cold months are upon us, I find I have a bit more
time to sit and ponder. Here are a few items for you to think about should you
find yourself in the same position:
In a recent poll conducted by Politico, Colorado came out
pretty well. It was ranked the 6th
strongest state. The criteria included
the following: Annual per capita income ($31,674); percentage of unemployed
(3.5%); percentage below poverty level (12%); home ownership (63.9%):
percentage of high school grads (90.5%); life expectancy (80) with Infant deaths/1000
(4.79). Denver was also just recently
ranked the 8th most future ready city. Tell me, in your businesses, are you
experiencing the same positive trending?
In a recent tour of the country, the CEO of Volkswagen said,
after California rejected its remediation plan, that his Company did not lie to
the EPA; it was a technical misunderstanding…
In my previous newsletter I suggested that perhaps criminal sanctions
might be in order. I think in a court of
law, the CEO’s recent statement could be a pivotal moment in a trial.
Congress has just finished passing The Tax Extension
bill. There are tax breaks for certain special
interests with strong lobbying influence.
Interestingly, over the years, tax extenders have grown in popularity. The very first tax extender bill was passed
in 1988. There were 8 provisions. By 1992, there were 12. This year there are
50 provisions, costing $85 billion. One
reason for tax extenders is that line item inclusion in the budget requires
lawmakers to consider the 10-year cost of the provision. Tax extenders are usually passed for one or
two years.
My favorite is the provision
promoted by Senator McConnell of Kentucky: it allows depreciation of race
horses over 3 years rather than 7. For
those of you in small business, there is the bonus depreciation extender. It allows businesses to write off a large
share of investment in new equipment by immediately taking an expense deduction
up to $500,000 (indexed for inflation) for new equipment. Another extender would allow startups that
are not profitable to qualify for a tax credit for research and
development.
In my humble opinion, special interests win out again. How do we even it out? How about balancing it
out with a higher
earned-Income tax credit, increased child tax credits, subsidies for people who
wanted to move in search of work and exemption of the first $20,000 in earnings
from the Medicaid payroll tax?
If you have any interest in following up on a tax extender
that might benefit you, please call me. I look forward to it.
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