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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

View from the Capitol: 'Taxmageddon' looms

Posted Friday, November 9, 2012, at 3:57 PM

Election Day has come and gone and America has moved a step closer to "Taxmageddon" - the end-of-the-year tax hike that will spell economic hardship for hardworking families and small businesses. It is up to a lame duck session of Congress to take steps to ensure America does not drive over the fiscal cliff that will lead to this severe hardship. Simply put, unless the course we're on is changed we will have to deal with new, higher tax rates come January. This tax increase is expected to be so devastating that economists at Ernst & Young estimate it would impact nearly one million small businesses and cost our nation 710,000 jobs during the worst unemployment crisis since the Great Depression.

Analysis from the Tax Policy Center (TPC) suggests that if the lame duck session fails to pass new tax legislation or to extend the Bush-era tax rates, the average American household would experience a $3,500 tax increase next year. Anyone who thinks only higher income citizens would have to pay higher taxes is sadly mistaken. While it's true the top one percent of income earners -- those making more than $506,211 a year -- would see the largest increase, no taxpayers are spared this hit as nearly seven out of eight households would pay higher taxes.

The TPC study concludes that while the top wage earners will pay more than $120,000 a year in higher taxes, even the bottom fifth of earners -- those making below $20,113 a year - would experience an average tax hike of more than $400. That's because citizens in the lowest tax bracket will increase from paying 10 percent to 15 percent in taxes. Young families will be hit when the child tax credit is reduced to only $500 per child instead of the current $1,000 per child. The marriage penalty will be reinstated so that single filers will pay less per person than if they are married. Not only is this unfair, but it sends the wrong message to couples, discouraging marriage.

Senior citizens who have worked hard for years and invested their dollars will be hit, as well, when they see their dividend investment income taxed at 39.6 percent, up from the current 15 percent. This is in addition to the 20 new taxes being imposed through ObamaCare.

It's not just young families and senior citizens who will be impacted at the end of the year if "Taxmageddon" is not averted. Families making their living on the farm or through small family businesses will also be hit hard. The estate tax is set to return with a vengeance. Currently, family farms and other estates worth less than $5.12 million are not subject to the so-called "death tax." Beginning in January, estates worth more than $1 million will be taxed at 55 percent, making it difficult for small businesses, including family farms, to be passed from one generation to the next. To put it succinctly: Families will have to sell the family farm or family business when a loved one passes away in order to pay Uncle Sam 55 percent of the value of that farm or business above a $1 million threshold. This is outrageous and must be stopped! It is beyond logic for government to be so intent on reaching for every tax dollar imaginable that it threatens family farms and other small businesses.

As a farm girl from Archie who now serves on the House Agriculture Committee, I am committed to preserving the family farm by fighting this irresponsible tax increase that will only serve to destroy family farms. Taxes on these properties have already been paid multiple times through income taxes, property taxes, and other taxes. It is wrong to subject American families to double, triple, or quadruple taxation.

The House has already passed legislation to address the looming tax hike and prevent "Taxmageddon." But the Senate and the Obama Administration have refused to act on our common sense bills. Now that the heat of the election campaign is behind us, I join my colleagues in urging the President and the Senate to put partisan politics aside and work on behalf of the American people to save this country from economic disaster. We need solutions to ease the burdens confronting small businesses to allow them to prosper and hire out-of-work Americans. I am ready and willing to work with anyone who shares this commitment to removing the barriers to help move our country out of its economic wasteland.

Have a good week.

Vicky


Comments
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Ms. Hartzler in case you missed it the Congressional Budget Office says that letting the Bush tax cuts for those at the top expire is the least harmful. Here is the link in case you wish to know what your budget office has to say on the subject. http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2012/...

-- Posted by Oklahoma Reader on Sat, Nov 10, 2012, at 12:23 AM

I cant believe some of these politicians are so quick to dip their hands into social security and medicare, but are constantly defending the rich and their tax cuts. Many people depend on social security and Medicare to make it month to month, so I call on every citizen to contact their house members and senate members and encourage them to protect the funding for thes programs. If anybody can part with some of their money it is those who make over $250,000 a year.

-- Posted by cheesehead on Sat, Nov 10, 2012, at 10:55 PM

Like all the political advertising over the last year, there are some glaring inaccuracies in this missive from Rep. Hartzler. For example, dividend income will be taxed as a part of ordinary income. The tax rate on additional dollars of ordinary income is only 39.6 percent on the top tax bracket taxpayers. Most middle-class residents of Saline County will not see the top tax rate and will be taxed on their dividend income at the same rate as the pay raise they got if they were lucky enough to get one.

I agree that the estate tax is a big problem and the $1 million exemption amount needs to be raised. However, a farmer's estate can take advantage of a tax deferral that can provide the time to pay the estate tax without selling the farm. Ms. Hartzler fails to mention this.

And are there truly twenty NEW taxes imposed with "ObamaCare," more properly known as the Affordable Care Act that Congress, including most of the currently sitting Republicans, passed? I'd like to see a list.

-- Posted by TerryM on Mon, Nov 12, 2012, at 11:33 AM

Not that Ms. Hartzler ever exhibited much concern for the folks of Marshall (most notably exhibited by her absence), but why should she be concerned now considering her lame duck status?

There won't be much progress during the remnants of her term.

Hopefully in the new term Mad Hatter Tea Party types will note the absence of several of their most cherished members such as Allen West, who were good for nothing except raging against a center right government, and sabotaging comity in Congress. Good riddance to all of them whether retiring, or rejected. Their mark in history is obstruction of government, nothing else.

-- Posted by Oklahoma Reader on Mon, Nov 12, 2012, at 4:07 PM

Ms. Hartzler will be most remembered as a member of the Congress that was the most disdained ever by the American people. The ratings of the do nothing 112th Congress sank below those of used car salesmen. That is probably because even the worst used car salesman gives us something for our money. Not so with the 112th Congress. ;)

-- Posted by Oklahoma Reader on Mon, Nov 12, 2012, at 5:32 PM

O.R. - Ms. Hartzler isn't a lame duck. She was re-elected.....Unfortunately for all of us.

-- Posted by cmasretire on Mon, Nov 12, 2012, at 6:17 PM

It is some solace for locals that (correct me if I'm wrong cmasretire) that you are now in the 5th district. At least Mr. Cleaver comes to town.

The other thing is that with the new session of Congress she won't be dosing locals with the hard to swallow Tea Party alter-reality.

Man I miss the days of reality based Republicans.

The best arguement for the declaration that the earth is six to nine million years old is the proponents of the position. Their brains appear to have been evolving for a much shorter time than humans have been on earth, say maybe nine thousand years at the most. ;)

-- Posted by Oklahoma Reader on Mon, Nov 12, 2012, at 10:49 PM

Poor Vicky.

She thinks her husbands multi-million dollar enterprise is a small business. Good one, hun.

Privately owned businesses can make their net income, which is subject to tax, anything they want it to be. Reinvestment in facilities, employee training, new equipment, buying out competitors, and so on are all ways to reduce your net profits and still maintain, and in many cases improve, the net worth of your business.

Problems occur when a business operates without any kind of a plan and wakes up one morning owing a big tax liability. You have to pay attention to income and expense, and make sure a plan to reinvest or offset income is adhered to. It's not rocket science, it's business. Hire a good accountant.

Vicky just thinks that from her perch atop the capitalist heap, (yet she is just a poor farm girl from Archie) is that those 47%'ers are just taking away all the money.

Now the job creators want the government to give them tax breaks, train their workers for them, provide roads and bridges, subsidize their energy, and support their former retired workers for them.

Who's on the take here? I'll tell you what, Vicky. If being poor in America is such a great deal, how 'bout you and the hubby sell out all your businesses, give away all the money, and then live the good life with the lower income Americans?

I won't hold my breath.

-- Posted by Smart Dog on Tue, Nov 13, 2012, at 7:52 AM

Vicky,

I know that you did not leave your brain in our district, because you rarely saw fit to visit any of us. May I suggest you left it in a teapot somewhere. Probably the little one with the tempest in it.

I am so glad you are out of this district. I pity those in your new district, as it is made up of a bunch of 47%ers. You know, like Veterans and those who have retired.

Good luck with those people!

-- Posted by Interested Too on Tue, Nov 13, 2012, at 11:32 AM


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Reports from the 4th District
REP. VICKY HARTZLER
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Vicky Hartzler is the U.S. representative for Missouri's 4th Congressional District. She was raised on a farm in Archie, and lives with her husband, Lowell and daughter, Tiffany, on a working farm in Cass County. She is a graduate of both the University of Missouri-Columbia in 1983 and Central Missouri State University (now University of Central Missouri) in 1992, graduating summa cum laude with a B.S. in Education from MU and a M.S. in Education from Central Missouri. For more information, visit http://hartzler.house.gov.