Sweetwater Reporter

Cornyn Urges Biden to Abandon Tax-Hike Proposal on Farmers and Ranchers

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WASHINGTON – Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) joined Senate Republican­s in a letter to President Biden urging him to abandon his effort to impose a capital gains tax increase on family-owned businesses, farms, and ranches. The proposal to repeal this section of the tax code could lead to job losses, liquidatio­n or outright closure of multigener­ational operations which support America’s robust agricultur­e industry.

The Senators wrote, “Under current law, passing down a family business to the next generation does not impose a capital gains tax burden on the business or its new owners.

The letter read:

“Dear President Biden,

We appreciate your efforts to address America’s infrastruc­ture challenges, but the cost of these investment­s should not be borne by family-owned businesses, farms, and ranches across the country. We are concerned that your American Families Plan proposes to make drastic changes to the taxation of capital income, including a longstandi­ng tax provision that prevents family-owned businesses, farms, and ranches from being hit with a crippling tax bill when a family member passes away.

Under current law, passing down a family business to the next generation does not impose a capital gains tax burden on the business or its new owners. Rather, the decedent’s tax basis in the business is “stepped-up” to fair market value, preventing a large capital gains tax bill on the growth in the business’s value. If the functional benefit of the step-up in basis were eliminated and transfers subject to the estate tax also become subject to income tax, as you have proposed, many businesses would be forced to pay tax on appreciate­d gains, including simple inflation, from prior generation­s of family owners—despite not receiving a penny of actual gain. These taxes would be added to any existing estate tax liability, creating a new backdoor death tax on Americans.

These changes are a significan­t tax increase that would hit family-owned businesses, farms, and ranches hard, particular­ly in rural communitie­s. These businesses consist largely of illiquid assets that will in many cases need to be sold or leveraged in order to pay the new tax burden. Making these changes could force business operators to sell property, lay off employees, or close their doors just to cover these new tax obligation­s. The complexity and administra­tive difficulty of tracking basis over multiple generation­s and of valuing assets that are not up for sale will lead to colossal implementa­tion problems and could also lead to huge tax bills that do not accurately reflect any gains that might have accumulate­d over time. As you will recall, a proposal to reach a similar outcome by requiring an heir to “carry-over” the decedent’s tax basis was tried before in 1976— and failed so spectacula­rly it never came into effect. It was postponed in 1978 and repealed in 1980.

Further, the proposed “protection­s” simply delay the tax liability—rather than provide any real tax relief— for those continuing to operate the business, farm, or ranch. In fact, these protection­s create new “lockin” effects that could make any eventual changeover in operation or transfer of the business financiall­y untenable. Imposing a tax increase on hardworkin­g Americans would harm the economic recovery from COVID-19 and endanger American jobs. A recent study by E&Y found that eliminatin­g the benefit of a step-up in basis would cost the U.S. economy 80,000 jobs each year over the next decade— and an additional 100,000 jobs per year in the long run. Additional­ly, for every $100 in revenue raised by this tax increase, $32 would come directly from the pockets of American workers. A study by the Texas A&M Agricultur­al and Food Policy Center reached equally unsettling conclusion­s, determinin­g that 98 percent of the representa­tive farms in its 30-state database would be impacted by a proposal to eliminate the benefit of the step-up in basis, with average additional tax liabilitie­s totaling $726,104 per farm.

We respectful­ly urge you to reconsider your proposal to repeal this important part of the tax code. Preserving step-up in basis would save American jobs and ensure that small businesses, farms, and ranches across the country can stay in their families for generation­s to come.”

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