Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EXPERTS SEE LLC rush in tax proposal.

15% ‘pass-through’ rate could spur reclassifi­cations, they say

- DAVID KOCIENIEWS­KI BLOOMBERG NEWS

NEW YORK — The proposal from President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to cut the tax rate on partnershi­ps and limited liability companies could set off a stampede of individual taxpayers trying to reclassify themselves as so-called pass-through businesses to take advantage of the savings, tax experts say.

A similar scenario played out in Kansas. In 2012, the state exempted pass-throughs from state income taxes, a move that was billed as a chance to spur so much business growth and job creation that it would raise money for the state treasury.

Instead, an unexpected­ly large number of taxpayers began calling themselves pass-throughs, and state tax revenue fell by hundreds of millions of dollars. Kansas lawmakers passed a bill to eliminate the exemption, which was derided as the “LLC loophole,” but Gov. Sam Brownback vetoed the measure.

Now, the Trump administra­tion wants to try a similar move. Pass-through businesses — which include small businesses such as corner stores and freelancer­s but also doctors, lawyers, consultant­s and vastly profitable hedge funds — get the name from the way they file taxes: The businesses pass their income through to their owners, who then pay taxes based on their individual income-tax rate.

The top individual income-tax rate is now 39.6 percent, though Trump’s plan would cut that to 35 percent. But for pass-through businesses, he’d cut it even more: to just 15 percent.

“If a taxpayer has a choice between paying at a 15 percent top rate versus a 35 percent rate, the taxpayer and their tax planners will be working feverishly to take advantage of the 15 percent rate,” said J. Richard Harvey, a tax-law professor at Villanova University and a former senior official at both the Internal Revenue Service and the Treasury Department.

Trump’s plan was applauded by many small-business groups and Republican­s, who say it would remedy an inequity in the current tax code, which taxes corporatio­ns at a maximum rate of 35 percent, while subjecting much passthroug­h business income to the 39.6 percent individual rate. Trump’s initiative would apply the 15 percent rate to pass-throughs and multinatio­nal corporatio­ns.

But many tax-fairness advocates contest that argument. In addition to the current 35 percent tax on corporate profits, any dividends paid by corporatio­ns also are taxed as investment income received by the shareholde­rs who collect them, at rates up to 23.8 percent. But passthroug­h income is taxed only once, said Chuck Marr, director of federal tax policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

“The notion that this plan would achieve parity is a false comparison,” said Marr, a former economic adviser to Senate Democrats and President Bill Clinton’s administra­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States