The Borneo Post

As tax debate heats up, US Republican­s tweak business interest plan

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WASHINGTON: Congressio­nal Republican­s, seeking to address the complaints of small businesses, are floating changes to their controvers­ial proposal to eliminate business tax deductions for debt interest payments, business lobbyists said.

A top US Republican on tax policy acknowledg­ed that modificati­ons are in the works, but did not provide details.

The debt interest proposal, long seen by Republican policymake­rs as necessary to help drive economic growth, is backed by large companies with ready access to equity financing that they could substitute for debt if eliminatin­g the interest deduction made issuing debt too costly. Debt- dependent small business owners, farmers and ranchers don’t have that luxury.

As Republican­s in Congress and the Trump administra­tion slog ahead with a push to overhaul the US tax code, a key task is figuring out how to resolve conflictin­g groups’ priorities, with business debt interest a clear example.

The tax code has not been overhauled since 1986, partly because reconcilin­g these conflicts can be so difficult.

“We’ve asked businesses large and small to look at that, test drive it and give us back their feedback,” House of Representa­tives tax committee chairman Kevin Brady said in remarks at an event in Louisville, Kentucky on Tuesday, without offering specifics about the modified proposal.

His staff at the committee had no comment. Businesses lobbyists said the panel’s lawmakers have quietly agreed to focus on exemptions for small businesses, including farmers and ranchers, and an exemption for land.

Lawmakers have also discussed a possible partial eliminatio­n of the interest deduction, with an exemption for existing debt, or eliminatin­g the deduction only for businesses deemed to have an excessive amount of debt, according to lobbyists.

Brady is one of the ‘Big Six’ negotiator­s from Congress and the Trump administra­tion who are guiding the tax reform debate.

At the Louisville event, he described rolling back the business interest deduction as a ‘trade- off’ for another proposal to accelerate expensing, which would allow businesses to write off investment­s in plants and equipment more quickly.

He said net interest deduction is one of a number of tax breaks that lawmakers are looking to eliminate to help pay for lower business tax rates.

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