Proposed Tax Legislation and Impact on 2022/2023 Tax Planning
Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting highlights critical tax proposals under consideration by Congress that could influence tax planning for 2022 and beyond. The proposals include a scaled-down version of the Build Back Better Act, which focuses on drug pricing and climate change provisions, alongside extending certain elements of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Other notable discussions involve denying tax benefits to companies operating in Russia and reforming tax-favored savings requirements. With Congress nearing a recess for elections, timely action on these measures is essential.
- Potential to impact 2023 tax planning positively if proposals are enacted.
- Bipartisan support for new legislation aimed at bolstering U.S. manufacturing and tax reforms.
- Provisions of the Build Back Better bill are uncertain, with significant negotiations ongoing.
- Several tax benefits could be delayed or not enacted due to time constraints before congressional adjournment.
When you have to be right. (Graphic: Business Wire)
What:
Why: With 2022 already over half over, it is important to monitor these tax developments for possible year-end tax planning and planning for 2023. Some of the pieces of tax legislation under consideration include:
-
Build Back Better. Now reduced from a
package last year to something closer to$3.5 trillion , a tentative agreement has been reached on negotiating drug pricing (subject to the Senate Parliamentarian approval as appropriate for a reconciliation package) and an expansion of the net investment income tax. Still under negotiation are provisions concerning climate change, infrastructure, child tax credits, elderly housing, electric vehicle subsidies, a corporate minimum tax, an AGI surtax, and international tax reforms.$2 trillion Senator Manchin opposes climate change provisions and corporate and individual tax increases. It is expected that if Build Back Better is passed, new provisions will not be effective until 2023. -
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Some of the provisions of the Tax Cut and Jobs Act enacted in 2017, such as immediate expensing of research and development expenses, 100 percent bonus depreciation, and calculating the interest expense deduction limitation, are scheduled to expire. Many in
Congress would like to find a vehicle to extend these provisions. -
China Competition Legislation. Proposals to promote the domestic production of silicon chips and other manufacturing activity deemed important to the
U.S. economy also has bipartisan support. Senate Minority Leader McConnell has indicated that he will try not to let it pass untilSenate Democrats abandon their Build Back Better efforts. -
Companies doing business with
Russia . There is also bipartisan support to deny tax benefits toU.S. companies continuing to do business withRussia after its invasion ofUkraine . This could end up as a revenue raiser to support provisions in Build Back Better. -
SECURE 2.0. One version of a second effort at reforming tax-favored requirement savings has passed the House, and a different version has passed out of the
Senate Finance Committee . Even if theSenate passes the Senate Finance version, there are sufficient differences between the two versions that they probably cannot be worked out in a conference committee before the fall elections. - American Rescue Plan credits. The Administration would like to extend the American Rescue Plan Act’s one-year enhancements to the Child Tax Credit and the Earned Income Tax Credit to 2022 and the enhancements to the Premium Tax Credit beyond 2022. It is not clear that they can survive in the Build Back Better negotiations.
- Expired tax provisions. Several regularly expiring tax provisions, such as the mortgage insurance premium deduction, the nonbusiness energy property credit, the fuel cell motor vehicle credit, the alternative fuel refueling property credit, the two-wheeled plug-in electric vehicle credit, and the health coverage tax credit, expired at the end of 2021. There could be an effort to retroactively extend these for 2022 if the appropriate tax vehicle emerges.
Who: Tax expert
Contact: To arrange interviews with
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220728005057/en/
KELLY DE CASTRO
614-288-5640
Kelly.deCastro@wolterskluwer.com
Source:
FAQ
What tax proposals are currently being discussed in Congress that may affect WTKWY?
How might the Build Back Better bill impact tax planning for 2023 for WTKWY investors?