Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Tax plan weighs down nonprofits

- Tom Saler is a freelance journalist and the executive director of a Madison-based nonprofit. He can be reached at www.tomsaler.com.

“These are my principles,” the comedian Groucho Marx once proclaimed. “If you don’t like them, I have others.”

The same might be said for lawmakers who’ve built careers out of condemning budget deficits, but who now seem intent on passing a tax bill that, absent cuts to Medicare and Social Security, could add at least $1.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. About three-quarters of that amount will accrue to wealthy heirs and forprofit businesses whose earnings relative to GDP already are near an all-time high.

But while the for-profit sector of the U.S. economy is poised to receive a gusher of government largess, the nonprofit community stands to lose a crucial source of funding.

Under a bill passed by the House of Representa­tives last month, the standard deduction — now used by 80% of taxpayers — would double to about $12,000 for single filers and $24,000 for married couples. If enacted, the number of taxpayers who itemize — and thus are eligible to deduct charitable contributi­ons — is estimated to drop from 20% to 10%.

Even for individual­s and families who continue to itemize, cuts in top individual tax rates would effectivel­y increase the after-tax price of charitable contributi­ons. According to the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center, the aftertax cost of a charitable deduction for the top 1% of earners would rise from 67.7% to 94.3%, and for all income levels from 79.2% to 91.3%.

Individual­s account for about 80 cents of every dollar donated to a public charity, compared with 15 cents for foundation­s and five cents for corporatio­ns. On an inflation-adjusted, percapita basis, charitable giving in America — a category that includes religious, educationa­l, human services and arts organizati­ons — has increased by 250% over the last 60 years.

That amount does not include the economic value of the 8.7 billion volunteer hours that 63 million Americans donate annually. College graduates are more than twice as likely to volunteer than those without a post-secondary education.

In a May report that reflected expectatio­ns for a slightly smaller rise in the standard deduction, the Lilly Family School of Philanthro­py reported that “the current proposals, which include an increase in the standard deduction and a decrease in the top marginal rate, would have a negative effect on charitable giving” of up to 4.6%, or $13.1 billion per year.

Educationa­l institutio­ns could be particular­ly hard hit through an excise tax on college and university endowments and by a phase out of the estate tax. The House plan also waters down a popular 1954 law that prohibits charitable organizati­ons from engaging in political activities.

Jobs at stake

There is more on the line than good deeds. Besides promoting a wide array of charitable causes, nonprofit organizati­ons in the U.S. make significan­t economic contributi­ons as well.

Philanthro­pic organizati­ons account for 5.4% of the nation’s total output of goods and services, a three-fold increase since the 1950s. Over 11 million people — roughly 10% of the workforce — are employed in the nonprofit sector. Since 2000, nonprofit revenues have roughly doubled, to almost $2 trillion.

I doubt that the authors of the various tax-cut proposals making the rounds in Congress set out to deliberate­ly injure the nonprofit sector. Most of the damage to charitable organizati­ons would be the unfortunat­e consequenc­e of revising a tax code that for almost all of its history made tax-deductible donations deductible only for wealthy taxpayers.

Over a five year stretch in the early 1980s, however, charitable contributi­ons were considered “above the line,” and thus lowered a filer’s adjusted gross income by the amount of the donation regardless of whether the standard deduction was taken.

“Combined with current tax reform proposals, expanding the charitable deduction to non-itemizers more than offsets the charitable giving lost by other tax reform proposals and increases giving by 0.4% to 1.7%,” the Lilly Family School of Philanthro­py study concluded. “Expanding the charitable deduction to non-itemizers, as a stand-alone provision, increases total giving by between 1.3% and 4.3% and has a negligible effect on total revenue…”

If Congress can see fit to provide a windfall to the for-profit sector, it can also see fit to help nonprofits. It’s time to make charitable donations tax deductible for everyone.

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