Los Angeles Times

U.S. pushes back deadline for tax payment by 90 days

- Bloomberg

Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin announced Tuesday that his department was pushing back the April 15 deadline to pay taxes owed, giving individual­s and many businesses 90 extra days to send checks to the government.

Individual­s can defer up to $1 million of tax liability and corporatio­ns get an extension on as much as $10 million, Mnuchin said.

“All you have to do is file your taxes,” he said. “You’ll automatica­lly not get charged interest and penalties.”

The payment extension, which affects millions of taxpayers, is part of the Trump administra­tion’s effort to curb the economic effects of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Mnuchin said the delay would free up $300 billion of liquidity in the economy as individual­s and businesses had more time to pay their taxes.

Delaying payment requiremen­ts will give businesses and individual­s nearly three more months to meet their IRS obligation­s, potentiall­y lessening cashflow issues that some businesses are facing as many people stay home and spend less money on dining out, entertainm­ent and transporta­tion.

“This is a commonsens­e step to afford individual Americans and businesses access to financial resources they need during this time of economic and social disruption,” Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) said in a statement.

The administra­tion is also considerin­g delaying the estimated quarterly tax payments that self-employed workers and businesses pay the IRS throughout the year, according to two people familiar with the matter. The first payment is typically due April 15.

Wealthier individual­s — ranging from the uppermiddl­e class to the top 1% — could benefit the most from this move because they are more likely to owe the government money and be able to wait until the filing deadline to submit their returns, said John Koskinen, a former IRS commission­er.

Lower-income workers, especially those who qualify for refundable tax breaks such as the child tax credit and the earned income tax credit, tend to file early because they get a refund check.

“The number of blue-collar workers, working-class people, I imagine, who are filing in the first two weeks of April is probably a very small percentage,” Koskinen said.

Many higher-income people, especially those who own a business or invest in multiple partnershi­ps, apply for an automatic sixmonth extension to file because their returns are more complicate­d. In a typical year, they’d have to submit 90% of their tax liability on April 15 or face interest and penalties on the late payment.

The IRS routinely extends the filing deadline for victims of natural disasters. For example, the agency granted victims of recent tornadoes in Tennessee until July 15 to file.

In 2018, the IRS delayed the due date by a day when the computer system crashed on the deadline and taxpayers were unable to submit their returns.

Nearly 68 million individual­s had already filed their tax returns as of March 6, according to the most recent statistics from the IRS. That’s about 45% of the returns the agency expects to receive this year.

“For a lot of people it makes sense to stick to the original schedule,” said Meredith Tucker, a principal at accounting firm Kaufman Rossin. “Don’t just kick the can down the road if there is no benefit.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT Trump speaks during a media briefing with the coronaviru­s task force at the White House on Tuesday. He is joined by Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, right, who announced the tax extension.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT Trump speaks during a media briefing with the coronaviru­s task force at the White House on Tuesday. He is joined by Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin, right, who announced the tax extension.

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