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Home / Articles / Tax Agenda Highlights From President Biden’s Proposed Budget

Tax Agenda Highlights From President Biden’s Proposed Budget

March 29, 2024

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President Biden has unveiled his proposed budget for the 2025 fiscal year, outlining various tax provisions impacting businesses and individual taxpayers. Although these proposals face significant hurdles in the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives, their fate may shift after the November elections. Below is a summary of the key tax proposals outlined in the budget.

Business Tax Provisions

The proposed budget includes many changes that could affect businesses’ tax outlook, several of which Biden has previously endorsed. Among the most notable:

  • Corporate tax rates. Under this proposal, the tax rate for C corporations would increase from 21% to 28% — still below the 35% rate that was in effect before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA). The effective global intangible low-taxed income (GILTI) rate would increase to 14%, and additional proposed changes would further increase the effective GILTI rate to 21%. The corporate alternative minimum tax rate would go up to 21%, from 15%.
  • Executive compensation. Biden proposes extending the current limitation on the deductibility of compensation in excess of $1 million for certain executives in publicly owned C corporations to privately held C corporations. A new aggregation rule would treat all members of a controlled group as a single employer for purposes of determining covered executives.
  • Excess business loss (EBL) limitation. Under the TCJA, noncorporate taxpayers can apply their business losses to offset only business-related income or gain, plus there’s an inflation-adjusted threshold (for 2024, $305,000 or $610,000 if filing jointly). The proposal would make this limitation permanent and treat EBLs carried forward from the prior year as current-year business losses rather than as net operating loss deductions.
  • Stock buyback excise tax. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) created a 1% excise tax on the fair market value when corporations repurchase their stock to reduce the difference in the tax treatment of buybacks and dividends. The proposal would quadruple the tax to 4%. It also would extend the tax to the acquisition of an applicable foreign corporation by certain affiliates of the corporation.
  • Like-kind exchanges. Owners of certain real property can defer the taxable gain on the exchange of the property for real property of a “like-kind.” The proposal would allow the deferral of gain up to an aggregate amount of $500,000 for each taxpayer ($1 million for joint filers) each year for real property like-kind exchanges. (Other types of assets wouldn’t be eligible.) Excess like-kind gains would be recognized in the year the taxpayer transfers the real property.

Individual Tax Provisions

Biden continues to promise that he won’t raise taxes on filers earning less than $400,000 annually but opposes extending tax cuts for those making more than that amount. Among other things, his proposed budget would affect:

  • Tax rates. The proposal would return the top individual marginal income tax rate for single filers earning more than $400,000 ($450,000 for joint filers) to the pre-TCJA rate of 39.6%.
  • Net investment income tax (NIIT). The NIIT on income over $400,000 would include all pass-through business income not otherwise covered by the NIIT or self-employment tax. The budget also would increase both the additional Medicare tax rate (on earnings above $400,000) and the NIIT rate (on investment income above $400,000) to 5%.
  • Capital gains taxes. Individuals with taxable income exceeding $1 million would see capital gains taxed at ordinary income rates, up from the current highest capital gains rate of 20%. Also, unrealized gains at death would be taxed, subject to a $5 million exemption ($10 million for married couples).
  • Child Tax Credit (CTC). The proposal would boost the maximum per-child credit — to $3,600 for qualifying children under age six and $3,000 for all other qualifying children — and increase the maximum age to 17, through 2025. It also would implement an advance monthly payment program, establish a “presumptive eligibility” concept and permanently make the CTC fully refundable.
  • Premium tax credits (PTCs). Biden would make permanent the IRA’s expansion of health insurance subsidies to taxpayers with household income above 400% of the federal poverty line, as well as the reduction in the amount of household income that must be contributed to qualify for PTCs.
  • Gift and estate taxes. The proposal would close several gift and estate tax loopholes that help the wealthy reduce their taxes. For example, certain transfers would be subject to a new annual gift tax exclusion, whereby a donor’s transfers that exceed a total of $50,000 in a year would be taxable regardless of whether the total gifts to each individual recipient didn’t exceed the annual gift exclusion amount ($18,000 per recipient in 2024).

Change is the Only Constant

While the proposed provisions may not all be implemented, it’s probable that new tax legislation will emerge within the next year or two. This is particularly pertinent as many key provisions of the TCJA are set to expire after 2025 without congressional action. Expect robust discussions and negotiations surrounding tax matters in the near future. As always, CSH is staying close to these developments and will continue to monitor these tax provisions as they develop.

All content provided in this article is for informational purposes only. Matters discussed in this article are subject to change. For up-to-date information on this subject please contact a Clark Schaefer Hackett professional. Clark Schaefer Hackett will not be held responsible for any claim, loss, damage or inconvenience caused as a result of any information within these pages or any information accessed through this site.

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