The Oklahoman

Tax overhaul plan poses big unknowns for homeowners

- Kenneth Harney kenharney@ earthlink.net

IWASHINGTO­N — f you’ve been pondering how you as a homeowner or buyer might fare under the new Republican tax overhaul plan, here are a few points to consider.

Although the tax proposal got fattened up a little over the summer — moving from a White House “outline” of barely one page to a “framework” now consisting of nine pages — there’s been minimal meat added to the bones regarding housing.

Yes, the mortgage interest deduction will still be preserved, but with the doubling of the standard deduction to $12,000 (single tax filers) and $24,000 (joint filers), many current itemizes taking the mortgage write-off are likely to opt for the standard deduction.

That may sound fine to you. There are undeniable attraction­s to the idea of simplifyin­g the tax code by allowing taxpayers to take a single, large deduction instead of itemizing multiple smaller ones.

But it may not be a net benefit for you, depending on the final details. If, as expected, you lose the current personal exemption of $4,050, plus you’ve got kids, a spouse, a house and other key deductions are eliminated, you could end up paying more in federal taxes, not less.

If most people take the standard deduction, the homeowners­hip stimulant effects of the mortgage interest write-off could be diminished and have an impact on home prices.

A study by auditing and consulting firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs earlier this year found that reducing the number of taxpayers who claim the mortgage deduction — along with eliminatin­g local tax write-offs and factoring in lower marginal tax rates — could lower the investment value of homes and depress prices by an average of 10.2 percent.

The study was commission­ed by the National Associatio­n of Realtors — hardly a disinteres­ted party in the tax debate. But some academic studies also have concluded that there is a tax-subsidy component built into home values that would be depressed if tax incentives such as the mortgage interest deduction were cut or removed.

Last year, a study by a Federal How would the Republican tax overhaul plan affect you?

Reserve economist estimated that totally eliminatin­g the mortgage interest deduction would cause the average household in the country to lose 10.9 percent of its home value.

The lack of detail in the Republican tax framework makes it difficult for anyone, especially homeowners, to calculate what the changes would mean for their personal federal tax bill. The framework offers to collapse the current seven marginal tax brackets into just three — 12 percent, 25 percent and 35 percent — but does not provide income cutoff points associated with each bracket. So you can’t be sure where you end up.

The framework is also coy about just which deductions currently taken by millions of individual­s no longer would be

permitted. It only identifies two personal deductions that would survive the cuts: charitable contributi­ons and mortgage interest. This leads to the inevitable conclusion that one of the biggest and most politicall­y sensitive write-offs, state and local taxes, would not survive. In fact, the eliminatio­n of that deduction appears to be an essential element in the plan, because it would help defray the gushing revenue losses elsewhere in what President Donald Trump has described as his administra­tion’s “giant, beautiful, massive, the biggest ever in our country, tax cut.”

State and local tax writeoffs are an important part of the financial calculus for many home purchasers and owners. Their eliminatio­n would add an estimated $1.3 trillion to federal tax revenues over the next 10 years. State and local deductions are most heavily claimed in areas with higher than average property and income tax rates, such as Washington, D.C., Maryland, New York, New Jersey, New England, Virginia, California and Illinois, among others. They are a big deal to local government­s and they are certain to be fought for passionate­ly by congressio­nal members from the states most affected, including Republican­s.

So where’s this all going and how fast? Think about the acrimony of the health care debate, add in legions of well-funded and politicall­y powerful lobbies each protecting their industries’ most prized tax code subsidies — real estate high on the list — plus a short legislativ­e calendar left this year, and you are easily into next year, which happens to be a congressio­nal election year, when all bets are off.

Retiring Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tennessee) summed up the prospects aptly: “Tax reform is going to make health care look like a piece of cake.” Whether you like whatever cake eventually pops out of the oven is an entirely different story. WASHINGTON POST WRITERS

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