Congress is leaving behind a big tax mess:
Many key issues remain unresolved for now. Although the House approved extensions for a group of expiring tax breaks, the Senate got bogged down in debate over health care overhaul, preventing it from tackling other must-do bills before year-end. The gridlock could lead to a train wreck on taxes in 2010. Not only will unfinished business have to be taken care of, but Congress will be staring at another major deadline because the Bush tax
cuts will expire at the end of the year if nothing is done.
This session’s biggest failure: Inaction on the estate tax. With no change in current law, the tax will disappear in 2010, then reappear in 2011 with a top rate of 60% and a low $1-million exemption. The generation-skipping tax will also end for a year, and the gift tax lives on, but the top rate falls to 35%. Also, some heirs of people who die in 2010 will owe capital gains tax when they sell inherited assets.
Current law, which steps up the basis for inherited assets to the date-of-death value, is replaced by a convoluted system that starts with the decedent’s income tax basis. Executors are allowed to increase the basis of inherited assets by up to $1.3 million, with an extra $3 million for assets left to a surviving spouse. Taxwriters realize this is a nightmare, so they’ll push for some kind of estate tax solution next year.
Also stuck in limbo: A bunch of tax provisions that will sunset Dec. 31. Among them: The R&D credit and write-offs for college tuition, teachers’ supplies and state sales tax, as well as the break for donating IRA distributions to charity.
Plus raising the AMT exemptions so they don’t fall to pre-2001 levels. These breaks will be renewed, retroactive to Jan. 1, 2010, but that may not occur until late 2010.
The waiver for 2009 of mandatory payouts from IRAs and plans will not be revived. Senior citizens were left in the lurch as well. Their Social Security checks will shrink in 2010 because there won’t be a cost-of-living increase to offset a hike in Medicare Part D premiums. Lawmakers failed to OK a bill for a onetime payment of up to $250 for these folks. And Congress didn’t stop a 2010 increase in premiums for about 25% of Medicare Part B recipients…singles with adjusted gross incomes of more than $85,000, couples with AGIs over $170,000 and new Medicare enrollees.
Those folks will see their basic 2010 Part B premium jump to $110.50 from $96.40. Congress did manage to renew one break before heading home for the year: The COBRA health coverage subsidy law, which originally allowed workers terminated after Aug. 31, 2008 and before Jan. 1, 2010 to get a nine-month subsidy for 65% of the premiums they paid to continue their coverage. That assistance has been extended to workers let go through Feb. 28, 2010. Anyone who is eligible for the subsidy can now receive it for
up to 15 months, up from nine months before. This also includes former employees whose subsidy payments ran out after November. Firms will have to notify those eligible for the longer subsidy about the extension.