San Antonio Express-News

Tax breaks sought for car dealers with supply issues

- By Laura Weiss

A bipartisan contingent of lawmakers is pressing to give car dealership­s relief from bigger tax bills they could face due to global microchip shortages that have pinched the supply of new vehicles.

Rep. Dan Kildee, D-mich., is leading the charge to deliver relief to dealership­s and working to attach his bill with Rep. Jodey C. Arrington, R-texas, to a bigger package that can get it to President Joe Biden’s desk in the coming months.

Kildee, a member of the taxwriting Ways and Means Committee and House Democrats’ whip team, said in an interview that he hopes it will be added to a package aimed at boosting U.S. semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing and competitiv­eness with China. That measure is in conference negotiatio­ns to resolve difference­s between House- and Senate-passed bills.

Kildee, a member of that conference committee, said his proposal is both a tax and trade issue and should be germane to the broader competitiv­eness package. “It’s a bill and an issue that fits very neatly in that subject,” he said.

If that doesn’t work, Kildee plans to look for the next possible legislativ­e vehicle, including a potential year-end tax package that could address expiring tax policy and a range of other outstandin­g tax issues.

The issue facing auto dealership­s

stems from an unexpected plunge in inventory because of the COVID-19 pandemic, auto groups say.

The global health crisis caused factories to close and reduced the supply of computer chips critical for producing cars and trucks, among numerous other consumer goods. Without the chips needed to power safety features, dashboard displays and more, auto plants have shut down or slowed production and left car dealership­s with emptier lots.

‘LIFO’ concerns

Dealership­s tend to use an accounting method called “last in, first out” for their inventorie­s, which allows them to consider the latest cars purchased for their lots as the first sold.

“LIFO” accounting is a timehonore­d method employed by numerous industries reliant on large inventorie­s, from oil refiners to grocers to wine and beer distributo­rs. It’s meant to smooth out the effects of inflation by providing bigger deductions for the cost of goods sold when higher prices kick in. Conversely, price drops will saddle companies with lesser deductions.

When inventory drops sharply, businesses like car dealers can see taxable income balloon because they’re stuck with slimmer cost of goods sold deductions based on lowerprice­d vehicles acquired earlier. For dealership­s, such sharp drops in inventory typically only occur when unloading product quickly with the intention of selling or winding down the business.

Under current law, the Treasury Department can offer relief in these situations if inventory falls due to an embargo, boycott or other “major foreign trade interrupti­on.”

But Treasury thus far has declined the industry’s plea, despite backing from Kildee and more than 90 fellow lawmakers in a November letter. Treasury determined they don’t have that authority under current law, according to Kildee and the National Automobile Dealers Associatio­n, an industry trade group that’s pressing for relief. A spokespers­on for Treasury declined to comment.

Kildee’s bill would make Treasury implement the change by law, sidesteppi­ng the need for administra­tive action. Under the legislatio­n anyone who deals in new motor vehicles — including cars, buses, trucks, boats, farm machinery and equipment and other vehicles — and uses LIFO accounting would be allowed through 2025 to replenish their inventory and in the meantime avoid recognizin­g any income for the 2020 or 2021 tax years related to falling stock.

‘Life and death’ issue

Kildee said the pandemic and related chips shortage has caused a unique challenge for dealership­s that he’s witnessed at home in Flint, Mich. He said thousands of trucks manufactur­ed in his district are sitting in parking lots and open fields while they await chips so they can be sent to dealership­s and sold.

The issue could be “life and death” for some dealership­s, Kildee said, and was never Congress’ intent.

“The federal government never anticipate­d that they would have a windfall from car dealership­s as a result of the pandemic and so, you know, we clearly need to act,” he said.

A companion Senate bill to Kildee’s is also in the works. Senate Banking Chairman Sherrod Brown, D-ohio, is planning to introduce legislatio­n, his office confirmed.

Brown also led letters to Treasury urging them to grant car dealership­s relief, including a February letter with Senate Finance Chair Ron Wyden of Oregon and 18 other Senate Democrats. Finance Committee member Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina led 32 Senate Republican­s in their own letter pressing for relief for dealership­s from the Biden administra­tion.

While it has bipartisan backing, Kildee said challenges to getting his bill over the finish line include the complexity and relative obscurity of the issue at hand, which he’s working to explain to colleagues. There’s also Congress’ busy to-do list in the coming months.

“The number of sort of issues competing for the limited oxygen in the room is also an issue,” he said. “I mean, we’ve got a lot going on and that makes it more difficult.”

 ?? Mario Tama / Getty Images ?? The issue facing auto dealership­s stems from an unexpected plunge in inventory due to the pandemic, auto groups say.
Mario Tama / Getty Images The issue facing auto dealership­s stems from an unexpected plunge in inventory due to the pandemic, auto groups say.

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