"A wise and frugal government which shall restrain men
from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government."
(Thomas Jefferson)


Saturday, February 6, 2010

Obama Budget Raises Small Business Tax Rate

Leave it to Obama and his Administration to raise taxes on small business owners at the same time they are touting how they are looking out for them. Word to the wise when Obama starts trying to help your group -- run away as fast as you can. With help like this, people will lose jobs or decide to shut down their business if they have to pay almost 50% in taxes like is in this Obama Budget for small business.

The Obama Budget From Michelle Fields
Friday, February 5, 2010

President Obama is touting all the advantages his budget has for small businesses. In particular, he's talking about using TARP funding (supposedly temporary, to be paid back to taxpayers) for small business lending.

Even if you limit yourself to the tax side of things, though, there are some pro-small business crumbs in the Obama budget: small business expensing is extended, a new jobs credit is created, and small business stock is exempted from capital gains. Good things, all, to one degree or another.

But there is one bad--very bad--tax increase on the small business sector in the Obama budget. Under his plan, the top two income tax rates increase from 33 and 35 percent to 36 and 39.6 percent. Two-thirds of small business profits pay taxes in these bracket levels. Small businesses pass their profits through to their owners, who pay income tax on them. To raise taxes on "the rich" is a laser-beam tax hike aimed at small employers.

Small business owners also have to pay the Medicare portion of the self-employment tax at the high margin. Furthermore, they will face a phaseout of their itemized deductions (Pease) and personal exemptions (PEP) under the Obama budget, unlike 2010 law.

What does that mean for the marginal tax rate on small business activity? Assuming a 5 percent state income tax rate, the calculation is the following for a sole proprietor or general partner (S-corporation owners don't have to pay Medicare tax, so it will be slightly smaller for them):

Excerpt: Read More at ATR.org

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