Six key tax provisions in the very long bill that Congress is about to pass
Some are better than others
Hi all! It’s been a while since I last sent out this newsletter. Turns out that it’s not easy to write a regular newsletter while being a full-time law student. In any event, there’s a lot of big tax policy news today, so I figured it was a good time to start the newsletter back up.
This afternoon, Congressional leadership released the text of a 5,593-page bill that is expected to be passed by the House and Senate soon. The bill contains:
About $900 billion in economic relief
About $1.4 trillion in appropriations for fiscal year 2021
A lot of other miscellaneous legislation
Like pretty much every long bill that Congress passes, this one contains plenty of tax provisions. By my quick count, roughly 200 out of the 5593 pages of the bill deal with tax changes [1].
By and large, the tax provisions in this bill are tax cuts, not tax increases. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the bill as a whole will reduce federal revenue by $328 billion over the next ten years.
Here’s a brief overview of six of the most important tax changes in the bill — along with a few thoughts:
1. $600 recovery rebates
Back in March, as part of the last pandemic economic relief package, Congress sent out one-time checks to U.S. households of $1200 per adult tax filer and $500 per child. The checks were administered by the IRS, and while there were some administrative hiccups along the way, they eventually made it to over 153 million U.S. households.
Now, Congress is back for a second round of checks — but smaller, this time. The bill would provide households with a rebate of $600 for each adult tax filer and $600 for each child. Like in March, high-income households will be ineligible for checks; the rebate amount phases out for singles making more than $75,000 and married joint filers making more than $150,000.
Disappointingly, while the bill provides $600 for each adult tax filer and for each dependent child, the bill provides $0 for each dependent adult. It is unclear why Congress decided not to include dependent adults in this provision.
2. Deduction for expenses paid with PPP loans
Another major program that was passed in March was the Paycheck Protection Program, a loan program designed to encourage businesses to keep workers on payroll. Many businesses receiving PPP loans were eligible to have their loans forgiven. For tax purposes, loan forgiveness normally counts as taxable income, but Congress included a provision that made PPP loan forgiveness non-taxable.
However, Congress didn’t clearly specify whether businesses who received tax-free PPP loan forgiveness would be able to claim a deduction for the payroll costs and other expenses that they used their PPP loans to pay for. In April, the Treasury Department determined that no deduction would be allowed — a business-unfriendly result.
Now, Congress is set to reverse the Treasury’s decision. Today’s bill states that receiving tax-exempt PPP loan forgiveness will not result in the denial of any business deductions. In fact, the bill places no limits on the ability of any business to deduct expenses associated with forgiven PPP loans.
On principle, this isn’t great tax policy. However, due to a weird quirk of Congressional budget scorekeeping, this provision will be scored as having a cost of $0. As a result, this provision was an easy way for Congress to increase the size of the economic relief package without increasing the cost on paper. Given that, at this point, more economic relief is probably better, I can’t really blame lawmakers for this one.
3. Deduction for business meal expenses
Expenses paid by companies can be divided into three categories. There are pure business expenses, which are almost always deductible. There are pure personal expenses, which are almost never deductible. And then there are expenses that fall in between.
Business expenses for food and beverages are in the third category. On the one hand, the cost of having a business meeting at a restaurant or the cost of running a company cafeteria are perfectly normal things for businesses to pay for. On the other hand, food and beverages are pretty much the epitome of personal consumption.
Currently, the federal tax code allows businesses to deduct 50% of the cost of food and beverage expenses. This can be understood as a sort of compromise, reflecting the part-business, part-personal nature of these expenses.
But Congress is now set to allow businesses to deduct 100% of the cost of food and beverages for tax years 2021 and 2022. This provision, which has been a priority for President Trump for several months now, is meant to support the restaurant sector, which has been struggling during the pandemic.
I think this is a pretty misguided move. For one thing, the last thing that we want right now is people going out to eat indoors at restaurants. For another thing, “temporary” tax provisions are often anything but; there’s a real risk that this change ends up becoming a permanent feature of the federal tax code. And that would be bad: Food and drink expenses are personal consumption in part, so they should not be treated as fully deductible business expenses.
4. More generous rules for the EITC and CTC
The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax Credit (CTC) are two of the more significant federal income support programs for low- and middle-income households. Both credits are only available to households with “earned income” in the current tax year. If a household doesn’t have much labor or self-employment income, it can’t claim the full amount of these credits — and if it doesn’t have any earned income, it can’t claim these tax credits at all.
This year, many households have seen their labor income drop significantly, often for reasons outside of their control. As a result, these households would not be able to receive the EITC and CTC amounts that they would normally be able to claim.
As a result, Congress will give households flexibility in how they calculate their “earned income” for purposes of the EITC and CTC. The bill released today would allow households claiming the EITC and/or CTC on their 2020 tax return to choose whether to use their 2020 earned income or their 2019 earned income. This is a bit of a kludgy policy change, but at the end of the day, it will mean more economic relief for households that need it the most.
5. Expanded deduction for charitable giving
Before 2020, the charitable deduction was only available to households that itemized their deductions. Then, in March, Congress allowed households that claim the standard deduction to deduct up to $300 in charitable contributions.
Now, Congress is set to expand the provision that it created nine months ago. Married households that file jointly and claim the standard deduction will now be allowed to deduct $600 in charitable giving, rather than $300.
Is this policy change going to materially affect how much Americans give to charity this year? No. Consider the number of households who 1) are married joint filers, 2) claim the standard deduction, 3) currently give less than $600 to charity, and 4) would decide to give more to charity in response to an expanded federal deduction. That number has to be pretty small.
So what’s going on here? Over time, the number of taxpayers who itemize deductions has fallen significantly, which means that fewer Americans have a federal incentive to give to charity. The charitable sector isn’t happy about that, because they’d like the federal government to give every American incentives for charitable giving. So, this $300/$600 deduction for non-itemizers is more of a ‘foot in the door’ than anything: In the future, we can expect members of Congress to push to expand these amounts.
6. Many expiring provisions are extended or made permanent
Anyone who’s followed federal tax policy over the last decade or so is familiar with the saga of the “tax extenders”: a group of tax provisions that are supposedly temporarily, but which Congress never allows to expire. These provisions — which range from alcohol excise tax cuts to the railroad track maintenance credit — are often renewed for a year or two at a time.
In the bill released today, Congress addresses the fate of 40 expiring tax provisions:
10 provisions are made permanent
11 provisions are extended until the end of 2025
19 provisions are extended for a single year, until the end of 2021
Unfortunately, these provisions are far too varied to say anything interesting about them as a group (but feel free to leave your thoughts about particular provisions in the comments!)
It is worth noting that the end of 2025 is also when much of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is set to expire, as Richard Rubin points out. With Congress now adding even more tax provisions that will expire at the same time, 2025 should be an interesting year in the world of tax policy.
Conclusion
Here, I’ve covered six of the major tax changes in the bill released by Congressional leadership this afternoon. Not all of these tax changes are ideal policy — but many of them will offer real, significant relief to households and businesses.
[1] The bulk of the tax changes in the bill can be found in:
"Division N, Title II, Subtitle B – COVID-related Tax Relief Act of 2020.” This is on pages 1965–2042 of the bill (which are, confusingly, numbered 42–119).
“Division EE – Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Relief Act of 2020.” This is on pages 4870–4989 of the bill (which are numbered 2403–2522).