OSU
Extension, Darke County
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012- What
does it mean
to Ohio Farmers?
From Sam Custer
The
United States Congress worked overtime over
the New Year’s Holiday to pass the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012
and was
signed into law by President Obama.
There are many provisions which are
allowing members of the agricultural
community to breathe a sigh of relief as they head into 2013 and some
provisions, such as the farm bill, will cause much debate in the
upcoming months. This
article provides a summary of some of
the provisions passed with this legislation, as well as a few
provisions that
were not addressed, which will impact agriculture.
Farm
Bill Extended and No Cows went over the
Cliff, Yet
The
Taxpayer Relief Act includes a nine-month
partial farm bill extension. With
consumers up in arms over milk prices rising to $7 to $8 per gallon
because the
milk subsidy program would revert back to an antiquated parity-based
price
support formula that was implemented in 1949 and would
have increased milk prices to close to
$40
per hundredweight, more than double the current milk price. This
extension of
the current subsidy program through December 31, 2013 will keep milk
prices
stable. Basically,
Congress kicked the
can down the road on the Farm Bill and making any corrections to the
milk
pricing system.
This
extension also extends $5 billion worth of
government subsidies for commodities such as corn and soybeans. Other
programs
including conservation, organic growing, fruit and vegetable, and
beginning
farmer and rancher programs were also extended but at lower funded
levels. It
should be noted that the direct payments were targeted for elimination
during
the farm bill discussions this past year. The Senate passed a farm bill
extension in June but the House never voted on its own version, leading
to a
stalemate which ended with the partial extension. Congress will now
have until
October 1 when the new fiscal year begins to pass a more typical
five-year
extension. Many
expect the key
components of last year’s farm bill proposals — an end to direct
payments, new
crop insurance programs and cuts in nutrition initiatives — to be
included in
the new legislation. At any rate, it will make for an interesting farm
bill negotiation
in 2013.
The
bill also extends supplemental disaster
assistance programs by amending the federal crop insurance act to
include 2013.
This raises questions for which answers are not known at this time. The
first
is the option for farmers wanting to exit from the average crop revenue
protection program (ACRE). Since
the
original rule was farm signed into ACRE must stay enrolled in ACRE,
does this
extension force farmers to stay enrolled through 2013?
Also the supplemental revenue assistance
payments (SURE) status is unclear at this time for 2012 and 2013.
Individual
and Capital Tax Rates
The
bill permanently retains the 10%, 15%, 25%,
28%, and 33% income tax brackets. The 35% tax bracket ends at $400,000
for
single filers and $450,000 married filing jointly. Above this
threshold,
there’s a new 39.6% tax bracket. Likewise the bill permanently retains
the 0%
and 15% tax rates on qualified dividends and long-term capital gains,
and adds
a new 20% tax rate that would apply to taxpayers who fall within the
new 39.6%
tax bracket. Which capital gains tax rate will apply depends on what
tax
bracket a person is in. The new capital gains tax rates for 2013 and
future
years will be
» 0%
applies to capital gains income if a person is in the 10% and 15% tax
brackets,
» 15%
applies to capital gains income if a person is in the 25%, 28%, 33%, or
35% tax
brackets
» 20%
applies to capital gain income if a person is in the 39.6% tax bracket.
Federal
Estate Tax
This
legislation permanently maintains the
federal exemption for gifts and estates estate tax exemption at $5
million
instead of dropping to $1 million. This amount will also be indexed for
inflation and includes the transfer of the unused exemption of a
deceased
spouse to the surviving spouse. It
should
be noted that this legislation included the word “permanent.” This is significant as
many fiscal agreements
made by Congress since 2001 have contained a phase out date. The top rate to tax
amounts in excess has
increased from 35% to 40%. But
for many
this was an acceptable compromise since it was scheduled to drop to $1
million
with the excess taxed at 55% in 2013.
This portion of the legislation should
allow many farm families to sleep
easier as they make plans to transition their farm businesses to future
generations.
Section
179 Increased & Extended
Internal
Revenue Code Section 179 allows farms
and other businesses to write off small amounts of annual investments
in
capital assets, such as machinery, in the year of purchase in lieu of
depreciating
the investment over a number of years.
The 179 deduction was reverted
(increased) back to the old 2010/2011
level of $500,000 for 2012 and 2013. This is a huge incentive given
that up
until this legislation was passed the 2012 limit was $139,000 and it
would have
dropped to $25,000 in 2013. Since
this
bill was not passed until the final hours, the increase to $500,000 for
2012
will most likely not help farmers unless they had purchased equipment
in excess
of $139,000 and had planned on just putting it on a regular deprecation
schedule. It should
be noted that this
deduction will revert back to $25,000 beginning in 2014. However, as always, time
will tell.
Bonus
Depreciation Extended
This
legislation also extended the special 50%
special depreciation allowance, also known as bonus depreciation,
through the
end of 2013. The
bonus depreciation
provision generally enables businesses to deduct half the cost of
qualifying
property in the year it is placed in service. Bonus Depreciation is now
scheduled
to be eliminated for the 2014 tax year.
Payroll
Taxes
In
2011, Congress had lowered the FICA payroll
tax rate from 6.2% to 4.2% to put more money in the pockets of
Americans. This
adjustment expired at the end of 2012.
This will result in a payroll tax
increase for workers. For
example, a farm employee earning $30,000
a year will take home $50 less per month.
Conservation
Easement Donations
The
special break for conservation easement
donations was extended through 2013.
Additional
Medicare Tax
As
part of the plan for funding the federal
health care, several new taxes were put into place that this most
recent bill
did not address. These included a tax on investment income and an
additional
Medicare tax for those people earning higher incomes. Both of these new
taxes
impact individuals making more than $200,000 a year or couples with
$250,000 or
more. These taxpayers must pay the new 3.8% tax levied on investment
income
such as cash rent received for farmland starting in 2013. Additionally, these same
high-earners must
pay an additional .9% Medicare payroll tax on wages above $200,000 for
individuals and $250,000 for couples. This increases the current 2.9%
Medicare
payroll tax to 3.8% for those dollars earned above the designated
earning
levels.
Want
to learn more?
The
complete American Taxpayer Relief Act of
2012 can be accessed at:
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hr8/text
David
Marrison, OSU Extension Associate
Professor & Chris Bruynis, OSU Extension Assistant Professor
authored this
article.
For
more detailed information, visit the Darke
County OSU Extension web site at www.darke.osu.edu,
the OSU Extension Darke County Facebook page or contact Sam
Custer, at 937.548.5215.
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