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Farm
lobby optimistic of getting long-sought tax breaks |
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By
Associated Press
May 16, 2011
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WASHINGTON (AP)
Agricultural groups have tried for years without success to get
Congress to eliminate inheritance taxes and enact several other tax breaks
sought by farmers. This year, farmers may get them.
The $1.6 trillion tax cut proposed by President Bush last week would phase
out inheritance taxes, and farm-state lawmakers hope to add several other
provisions that could benefit farmers. At the top of the list: creation of
special tax-deferred savings plans for farmers and ranchers.
The change in leadership of the House and Senate tax-writing committees is
likely to help the farm lobby get what it wants.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, has become chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee. The committees top Democrat is Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont.
Also, Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., has regained a seat on
the committee.
In the House, the new chairman of the Ways and Means Committee is GOP Rep.
Bill Thomas, who represents a major agricultural region in California.
Although Thomas has not endorsed specific tax proposals, he understands
farmer problems, said Pat Wolfe, a lobbyist for the American Farm
Bureau Federation.
The tax breaks being sought by farmers, including the tax-deferred savings
accounts, are ripe for passage this year, she said.
How it works
The Farm and Ranch Risk Management accounts, or FARRM accounts, are
designed to encourage farmers to save some of their income in good years
so they have it when the economy turns down. As much as 20 percent of a
farms income could be put into the account in any one year and kept
there for up to five years. Income deposited into the accounts would not
be taxed until it is withdrawn.
An estimated 900,000 farmers would contribute about $2.8 billion a year to
the accounts, an average of $3,100 per person.
The accounts were first proposed when Congress rewrote farm policy in 1996
and scaled back on federal price supports.
There is a good chance Congress will approve them this year, Grassley
said. He expects to get the accounts included in any tax cut plan that
comes out of the Senate, except in the unlikely event lawmakers agree to
pass Bushs plan with no changes, he said.
Its pretty unrealistic that there wont be some individual smaller
items in the tax bill that individual members want and have been
working on for a long time, Grassley said.
Cost spread out
The FARRM accounts would cost the government about $800 million in lost
revenue over the next 10 years.
The inheritance tax that Bush wants to abolish hits a relatively small
number of farmers about 4 percent of total farm estates nationwide,
according to the Agriculture Department. But the tax has became
increasingly unpopular with farmers in areas where land values rose
significantly during the 1990s.
With proper estate planning, as much as $2.6 million of a farms value
can be exempt from the tax, which runs as high as 55 percent. But farms
and ranches near urban areas can easily be worth $10 million to $15
million, said Linda Klemme, a Denver accountant.
The taxes are so high that there is no way the family can keep the
farm, she said.
Democrats say a tax cut as big as Bush has proposed could actually hurt
farmers if there is not enough money left over for emergency spending
programs or if revenues fall short of projections.
The government has provided about $9 billion in supplemental income
assistance to farmers over the past year and will be asked to provide
similar aid again this year to compensate for low commodity prices and the
soaring cost of fuel and fertilizer.
Bushs tax plan leaves no room or accounts for no possibilities for
emergency spending, said Mike Siegel, a spokesman for Baucus. |
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