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Interview: Breaking Down the American Rescue Plan Act

Posted on Mar. 23, 2021

Martin A. Sullivan of Tax Notes and Tynisa Gaines, an enrolled agent, discuss the tax provisions of the new coronavirus relief package and its impact on the economy and the tax community. 

 

David Stewart: Welcome to the podcast. I'm David Stewart, editor in chief of Tax Notes Today International. This week: tax tapas. On March 11 President Biden signed into law the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package designed to help boost the economy and combat the effects of the virus. But sprinkled throughout the new law is a wide variety of tax changes ranging from a third round of economic impact payments to the expansion of the employee retention credit.

Here to break down what's in the act and what it means for the tax community is Tax Analysts chief economist Martin Sullivan and Richmond-based enrolled agent Tynisa Gaines. Marty, Ty, welcome to the podcast.

Martin Sullivan: Thanks for having me, Dave.

Tynisa Gaines: Glad to be here during this stressful tax season.

David Stewart: Why don't we first start off with some overall reactions to the recent act. First of all, Marty, what is your overall reaction to this legislation as something to support the economy through this time?

Martin Sullivan: It's an economic stimulus. It's what we call a demand-side stimulus. They're trying to increase spending in the economy and get the unemployment rate down. My impression is that it is what we need to do. The question is: is it too large or not large enough? There's been a lot of debate currently about it being too large and perhaps overheating the economy. We do need relief in the form of a macroeconomic stimulus and this bill does provide it. The question is whether it's too much.

The other outstanding feature of this bill is its tremendous concentration to the low end of the income spectrum. It's very targeted. It's sort of the opposite of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act where most of the benefits went to the upper-income folks. This bill is very tightly targeted to low-income folks.

Just to give you an idea of the order of magnitude, this bill was $1.9 trillion, which is about 8.5 percent of GDP. What does that mean? If every man, woman, and child in the United States got a check from the U.S. government, that check could be $5,500. It would be $5,500 for every American.

Now not every American is getting that. A lot of that's going to lower end of the income spectrum. You can see how large an effect this is having on lower-income families.

David Stewart: Ty, let's turn to you. What is your overall reaction to this bill as something to support individuals and businesses?

Tynisa Gaines: It's actually a great bill for businesses if we take away some of the fraud. It looks like a lot of people applied for things they shouldn't have gotten like the Paycheck Protection Program loans and the Economic Injury Disaster Loans. There were a lot of people that started a business to get this, exaggerated the business they had, or didn't have one at all, and they received some of these benefits. Part of the problem when you roll these things out so quickly is that people that should get them may not. But overall, the intent is great for businesses.

I think for individuals, the unemployment was probably the only major thing that it did. It looks like they are going to make some adjustments to something like the premium tax credit, which is also for lower-income. I second Marty in that most of the benefits for individuals would be benefit the lower-income brackets at this time. They are who we need to support in times like this because they were the ones that were probably hit the hardest overall. They worked in the industries that were affected the most with the shutdowns and things like that.

Martin Sullivan: Even the business provisions are targeted toward the workers, so everything is looking at workers and people in need. The employee retention credit is to help the workers. The family leave and sick leave is to help workers. Those are business provisions, but they're really targeted not to helping the businesses. They're just transmitting benefits to their employees.

David Stewart: On this issue of targeting, we had these relatively large payments, the $1,400 baseline payment to individuals, that went out. There was some argument over how it was targeted and the eligibility was narrowed a little bit. Can you tell us a bit about how that's structured and whether that sort of eligibility rule makes sense?

Tynisa Gaines: The first two payments were set to go to people who married filing jointly made under $200,000. It basically started a phaseout from $150,000 to $200,000 so those people did not get the full amount. And then for singles, it was $75,000 to $100,000. If they were under $75,000, they got the full amount, and between $75,000 and $100,000 that would phase out, meaning they would get a smaller amount as they went over that amount.

The new bill, or I should say the recent one that just passed, limited that to where now only people under $75,000 will get the full amount and it phased it out at $80,000 for singles. For married filing jointly, it's $150,000 and phases out completely at $160,000. Anybody who makes between $160,000 and $200,000 and filed married jointly is cut out, and anyone who made between $80,000 and $100,000 as a single filer is cut out of this. In theory, I would say that they were saying, "Let's again target low-income."

I will say that $150,000 is not high income for the area I'm in. When you're looking at northern Virginia, Washington, D.C., Maryland, New Jersey, and New York, $150,000 is not a lot and those people did get cut out. We did hit some people that were probably lower-middle class with that amount, even though it may seem high to most of America.

You try to be fair and I get the target, but it did cut a few people probably off at the knees this year. Tax professionals are scrambling at this point actually to try to see if we can get our clients below that level this tax season because there are a few benefits we can probably use and strategies we could probably implement to help some people that might go over, stay under.

David Stewart: Now Marty, with all this targeting toward the lower end and this massive amount of money involved, what sort of economic effects can we expect from a bill of this size?

Martin Sullivan: The more the benefits are targeted to low-income folks, the greater stimulus effect you can expect. All other things equal, we'd rather have $200 of benefits to a low-income family than $100 and $100 to a low- and middle-income family. That's just in terms of pure macroeconomic stimulus.

The bill is $1.9 trillion, but only about $600 billion is tax. The other $1.3 billion is spending and most of that is the economic impact payments at $410 million.

Right now the GDP of the economy is about $22 trillion. We are about $1 trillion short of what we would call full employment, where inflation would start to kick in at higher levels. We expect this stimulus to be greater than the amount needed to get us to full capacity, and therefore might spark inflation. Now that's sort of the economics 101 answer to looking at this bill.

There's a lot more subtlety that you have to take into account right now. We can expect a lot of stimulus from this. But at some point the economy may get jammed up on capacity and the stimulus stops taking effect and the inflation takes over. That's what people are concerned about.

The other thing I think that most people don't notice, but it's very interesting and startling to me when I looked at the data, is that people have cut their spending this last year by $1.5 trillion. Folks who weren't living paycheck to paycheck just weren't spending as much. They were just staying at home, not dining out, not traveling, and just not doing all those things we do socially. Folks have an extra $1.5 trillion in their pockets. Whenever all the vaccines start working, perhaps that money will be unleashed as well.

We have this $1.5 trillion of cash sitting on the sidelines, and we also have the $1.9 trillion in stimulus. Since we only need $1 trillion to get to what many economists think is full capacity, it's a very stimulating, very big bill given where we are in the business cycle.

David Stewart: Turning to some of the tax provisions that we're looking at, I'm curious what both your takes are on which tax provisions of this bill that will have the most immediate impact and which ones might end up making the most important lasting changes.

Tynisa Gaines: Let's talk about the child tax credit. It is $3,600 for ages 0 to 5. Ages 6  to 17 is actually $3,000. There is actually a phaseout with that, too. There's a base $1,000 that everyone gets, but it phases out at the $75,000 for singles and $150,000 for joint filers. People over those amounts will not get that additional amount. They will get the original $2,000. It's a little bit more complicated than it's projected out to be. We've got that income limitation still set in place even for this credit.

Then the portal was supposed to be set up this summer with the IRS. In my opinion, that is going to be a logistical nightmare. The IRS is going to administer this portal that they have not yet created. People actually will have to opt out of it, meaning they're somehow calculating how much child tax credit people should get. I guess they're looking at date of births because if the child goes between 5  and 6, that credit is different. They're giving them 50 percent of that over the six months.

People who alternate claiming children on opposite years like divorced parents and people who, "I claim one year, the dad claims the next year." Who claims the advanced credit? Do they both opt out? Does one opt in?

The practical logistics of it are a nightmare up front for the actual taxpayer and a nightmare for the tax preparer because we can barely get people to remember how much their stimulus check was for the first two stimulus. Now we have to say, "Well, how much advanced child tax credit did you get?" If their income is below that this year and they calculate for it next year, it's higher, now we have an issue where they've may have received too much credit. This is a systematic issue.

It sounds all great and fun. I hear people are already trying to figure out what to do with their extra money, but it's just going to add to the confusion.

Martin Sullivan: Let me add on to that, Ty. I've looked down the list — the ERC, the PPP, which is not taxed but it's all involved with tax, and the expanded child credit are all sort of the same, but they're a little different, which makes it nightmarish for practitioners. When you look at it from 10,000 feet, you go, "Oh, they're just continuing the programs." But for practitioners, there are so many details and they're so similar. It's so easy to get confused.

Tynisa Gaines: The dependent care credit is also going to be expanded, which I think is well overdue. That one basically maxed out at $3,000 and most people only got a max credit of $600, whereas now it can go up to $4,000 per child, up to $8,000. It does stop at $2,000, but now that credit expenses up to $8,000 per child. It does change with an adjusted gross incme over $125,000 again, so here again we have some AGI limitations.

But it's still a much better credit and it is fully refundable, which is awesome because it was limited to tax liability before. Refundable means you can get a credit more than your tax liability. The dependent care credit is allowing that as well as the child tax credit.

David Stewart: With all these various credits and with all of the phaseouts, the way that they're structured, Ty, are you expecting to hear from people talking about, "Both parents work, but maybe it doesn't make sense for one of them to work this year because of these phaseouts and how much that marginal rate is going to be on us for working?"

Tynisa Gaines: I haven't heard the not-work thing. We are planning the married, filing separate thing. It's a thing now in the tax community that we are now saying, "Hey, guys. Let's see if married, filing separate makes sense for you, especially if you can get a stimulus check or dependent care for one of you."

Also earned income tax credit has changed to next year. It will allow married, filing separate to get the EITC. In the past you could not use that filing status and receive the credit. However, you can't get the dependent care credit unless both people work.

David Stewart: Marty, on a macroeconomic level, is it possible that people will drop out of the workforce to avoid hitting the phaseouts?

Martin Sullivan: We economists call it high marginal tax rates. On the phaseout from $75,000 to $80,000 on the economic impact payments, if you happen to be $75,000, you're going to think long and hard about working overtime. But I think there's so much confusion not just in this bill, but across the tax code for phaseouts, that nobody can actually figure out whether they should work more or less.

Tynisa Gaines: It'll be the tax preparers giving them the bad news next year.

David Stewart: Speaking of bad news from tax preparers, how about bad news for tax preparers? In this bill, we have retroactive changes to last year's tax rules. I'm thinking specifically about the exemption for $10,200 of unemployment insurance payments. I already know someone who will be affected by this has already filed their taxes for this year. Ty, what does this mean for you?

Tynisa Gaines: The IRS is telling us to hold right now as if to say they're going to fix it on their own for those that have already been filed. I'm not so sure that's a good idea. I think they just want us to hold because they don't want us pushing a whole bunch of amended returns in right now.

The problem is the states. Some states tax unemployment, some do not. My state of Virginia does not. California and New Jersey do not. We have a couple of states that already don't tax it. When you subtract it off the federal, if any of those states use the federal AGI to calculate the state, you're going to have to add it back. We're having to wait on software and we know that if the IRS adjusts it, it doesn't mean the states will. That's kind of a hold.

The other hold is those that haven't filed yet. We know they have it. We have basically, in the terms of old school people who didn't do virtual taxes, a drawer full of returns that are being held with unemployment on them because we're waiting for the software to update to make sure that we do the adjustments.

What's going to happen for the instructions we've been given is that we still report the income as normal because some states still tax that unemployment. It's just the federal that has exempted the $10,200. Then we take an adjustment on the Form 1040 for the $10,200, so they're only going to report the amount over that essentially. But again, with the states, some tax it, some don't, and we have to take into consideration this adjustment. Apparently some software has already updated theirs. Some people are working this adjustment and clients are getting more money back.

It's a good thing. Systematically having this happen in the middle of the tax season is the problem because clients want to file. They want to get this done. The other thing is it's only for people under $150,000. We have to look at that cliff again, where if they made $150,000 per taxpayer, single and married filing with the unemployment included, they cannot take the subtraction. It's only for those who are way under.

Again the news and the media are saying you get to take $10,200, but it doesn't apply to everyone. We have some taxpayers who are at that limit and can't take it. Then we have some with no tax liability that may have already filed. Whether we put it there or not, they wouldn't get any additional back. We just have to look at each person individually.

Martin Sullivan: A friend of mine applied for unemployment in March 2020 in Virginia. Eleven months later in February of this year, she received a lump sum payment over the limit. I read the bill. It says all payments received in 2020 get this exemption. So this individual, who had to wait 11 months, now she's going to not receive the benefit that most folks were getting because she received her payment in 2021.

David Stewart: Just dropping into note that within hours of recording this interview, the IRS formally announced that the tax filing deadline would be pushed back to May 17. So we'll skip over Ty talking about her expectations for the announcement and straight to how she feels about another extended filing season.

Tynisa Gaines: So how do I feel about this? I do not want it extended. I do not see the purpose of an extension of filing because clients like to procrastinate. If you move the date, they just move when they give you their paperwork. I believe that any client who has issues should go on extension just like any other tax season.

However, I do feel that if they were going to extend anything, a payment date would be nice. That would mean we could have extended the payment due date to June 15 or something just to kind of ease it to let the stimulus come in so people have money to pay the tax bill.

I just think that if you're going to extend anything, extend the payment but not necessarily the filing date. We shall see. As long as they don't go to July again, I'll be OK. I'm stopping April 15. I want my life back.

David Stewart: The IRS is being asked to do a lot and this bill did include some money to help them do their work. Ty, have you noticed in your dealings with the IRS the constraints that they're under? Does that affect your day-to-day work?

Tynisa Gaines: We cannot get through the phone lines. We cannot talk to a person. Our Centralized Authorization File unit, which is the unit that processes power of attorneys, has been backed up at least six weeks. You can't even get your power of attorney on file to talk to a person. Then when you finally do get to talk to a person, if you fax it in, then there's all these other complications with it.

Just trying to get something done with the IRS has been nearly impossible, besides the fact that they're sending letters because they haven't even opened all of their mail yet. We have returns that haven't been processed from last year. It's been a complete issue.

I know that the IRS is underfunded. I honestly believe that based on the funding that they have and those constraints that they're actually doing a pretty decent job because it's hard. It's hard to work with no resources. If anyone has ever worked for a company and the company didn't provide what you needed to do the job, and yet you still managed to do it, kudos to you. I feel like that's basically what the IRS is doing.

They have an antiquated computer system. They're just not upgraded. They're not up to date. A lot of things practitioners are asking for, they're starting to roll out, like us being able to send power of attorneys electronically. We're still mailing and faxing to the IRS. Come on. That's my two cents.

David Stewart: Marty, what do you think of additional funding for the IRS?

Martin Sullivan: For the last 20 years, we've been saying, "Why are we raising taxes on people who are paying taxes while we're allowing this enormous tax gap just to sit out there?" Hundreds of billions of dollars are not being collected, and study after study proves that if you increase IRS funding, it will more than pay for itself. With the incredible increase in the deficit this last year, people are saying it's moving onto the front burner again that we should increase IRS funding because it will help reduce the deficit.

It's what economists call taxpayer morale. People have been dumping on the IRS. It's the agency that's so easy to hate because they're taking your money, and making you do math on top of it all. It's been politically very easy to just beat on the IRS. I think they do an incredible job. 

We need to boost taxpayer morale. We need to boost employee morale at the IRS. That's our national infrastructure. I don't know how they do it. Ty, you talk about they do such a good job with so little. But how do they? I am amazed. Look how much they get right. It's just incredible.

David Stewart: Let's move on to another bigger question. This is the third round of funding and support for taxpayers. We've been through a rather unique stretch in our country's history. Are there ideas that are going to get reused the next time the economy declines?

Martin Sullivan: Well, just as with the rollout of the vaccines, I'm certainly no expert on anything like that. But I think we've learned a few lessons about how to do it better. Epidemiologists say there will be a next time unfortunately.

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act was legislated in literally in a matter of days. In that time frame, they put together  the ERC, which is a complicated piece of legislation, and the PPP program, which was $600 billion. If you spend $600 billion, you better be popular. But the hoops they made people to jump through, the frustrations and the complexity for the practitioners, for the business people, for the employees was just unforgivable.

I think we need to have what we call automatic stabilizers. Stuff on the shelf that's been thawed out that has been tested instead of just making it up on the day before they're going to vote. I think we've learned lessons. I hope we will put something on the shelf in advance for the next time when it happens instead of having couple of people in the room on Capitol Hill, making it up, and not even showing anybody the details until they have to vote. I'll get off my soapbox now, but I really feel for the practitioner community,

Tynisa Gaines: I was going to say I'll just jump right on your soap box because we're the ones that are really feeling this last-minute decision-making. In all fairness, it's been last-minute decisions for the past couple of years. The TCJA passed around Christmas. A lot of these things roll out at the end of the year and we're all like, "Ah! We have to adjust tax season." But this — the PPP specifically — the rules were changing every day, it was like your head was spinning as a practitioner.

Even now I'm kicking back books. Because the bookkeepers clearly were not keeping up with the rules and they've sent the books over and I'm sending back books and telling people this is how we reported. The EIDL advance is no longer taxable. The PPP is a loan until forgiven. And then it adjusts bases and S corps.

People just have no clue of how all of this really is supposed to work and it was not helpful with instructions. PPP is just now getting to where we kind of understand how it works. And guess what? The states haven't gotten on board. A lot of the states are saying, "Well we're still going to tax it. We're still not going to let people deduct it. But we're still not sure what we're going to do yet." Even though the federal makes these decisions, if they don't do it in advance, they're not giving the states enough time to make a decision on how they're going to handle it as a state.

Again, as practitioners we're dealing with the IRS says this and the state says this. We have to make a modification on state returns for certain things, PPP being one of them. It's still a struggling season overall when it's last minute and rolled out late. It's not just the IRS. People say the IRS and they act like that's the only place people pay taxes to, but it's not.

David Stewart: I want to keep the fun rolling. I want to talk about the deficit. So Marty, we've been talking about the stimulus. The pandemic is not a time to be stingy, but there's a deficit. When is it time to talk about sustainability and switch tracks? And what do those discussions look like?

Martin Sullivan: Back in my youth, we used to worry about a debt-to-GDP ratio approaching 40 percent. Now our debt-to-GDP ratio is at 100 percent. That would have been absolutely inconceivable a dozen years ago. We just assumed that everything would blow up. But guess what? It didn't. And guess what? Everybody said, "Well, that's going to cause interest rates to skyrocket."

The 10-year Treasury rate is now 1.6 percent, which is extremely low by historical standards. We really don't know when we should start really getting serious about the debt. But I know that in the past our fears were overblown.

Stimulus almost by definition is deficit spending. If we have a recession, we have to have a deficit. That makes sense. I would even say when we're funding infrastructure as President Biden's proposing for his next round of fiscal legislation, if you're going to really invest in capital, I don't mind deficit spending in that case. If you're using the deficit to invest that's OK.

But the real problem is because of the aging of society, because of Social Security and Medicare expanding at an incredibly rapid rate, the debt is going to increase, not for stimulus and not for infrastructure, but for consumption. That is a path to fiscal purgatory or even beyond. That's where we really have to concentrate our efforts — getting Social Security and Medicare under control or increasing taxes to pay for it.

I'm not so worried about these current bills, but I'm worried more about the long-term effect that is clearly there. Everybody thinks, "Oh, it's so great. I'm a fiscal conservative. I don't like risk, so we're not going to do any deficits." Well, there's a risk in not. There's a risk of not doing anything as well. That risk is called Japan. Japan was the world's second largest economy, now the world's third largest economy. It's shrinking because they did not take sufficient action. We have a possibility of falling into a state like them if we don't maintain stimulus. There's risk from higher debt, but there's also a risk from being afraid of debt.

David Stewart: Even though we've learned over the course of the last year that predictions are a terrible thing to make, I'm going to put you both on the spot. What do you think that people will be talking about in the tax world this time next year? Ty, why don't you start off?

Tynisa Gaines: Bitcoin. I know you weren't expecting that one.

David Stewart: Nobody expects Bitcoin.

Tynisa Gaines: Cryptocurrency is a big thing now. Honestly, everyone became a day trader in 2020. It's funny because Marty said people didn't spend money. I agree they didn't spend it on eating out and things like that, but they definitely became investors. Everyone has a Robinhood account or something like that, and started trading something whether it was stocks, cryptocurrency, or GameStop. We have had that happen for just this tax season and I don't think that we expected that.

The funny thing is that we see all of these new cuts and things and we're saying, "Oh, this is probably what we'll be talking about" like the child tax credit or the dependent care credit. Even the EITC has some changes and you can get it at age 19 and there's no limit, where it used to be you can only get it from 25 to 65. I think we will talk a lot about credits next year that before, because they were so small or not refundable, they didn't make an impact. I think that'll be a big discussion.

I think we'll also be talking about a lot more planning. Like you asked, will people not work? Will they do married, filing separate? I think taxes will evolve to where it's not just prepping the return, but actually discussing with clients what to anticipate for next year.

I think that the stimulus should be done. I'm with Marty — this should do it. We shouldn't have that again. Hopefully other than asking the question, "How much did you receive for your third stimulus payment?"

I was surprised that 2020 was like the year of the investor. It'll be funny to see next year what everybody is going to do in 2021 that's going to affect their tax return next year. It's almost hard to predict other than what you know has changed in the law. Those are the obvious things, but I think it will be something different that will pop up. That will be like, "Oh, we didn't see this one coming."

David Stewart: All right. Marty, what are you looking forward to talking about next year?

Martin Sullivan: Ty's giving you the view from outside the Beltway. Inside the Beltway we have this tidal wave piece of legislation coming through. If he holds to his campaign platform, President Biden's going to propose a $3 trillion infrastructure program. Then he's going to have accompanying tax increases to go along with that targeted at large corporations and the wealthy.

If you thought this bill was complicated, if this next bill comes through, you're going to see some major mega tax changes. But again, it's going to be a different in its character because while most of these benefits were targeted towards lower-income individuals, these tax increases would be on higher-income individuals. We're talking about capital gains taxation and estate and gift taxation. For corporations, we're talking about minimum taxes and increasing the international. It might not affect Ty's work too much. For example, changing the [global intangible low-taxed income]  rules, the minimum tax on foreign profits. But these would be mega changes.

Now the big question: Would that be done for reconciliation? Biden has a dream of actually getting 10 Republicans to go along with him in the Senate. It's just very hard to say what's going on.

Secretary Janet Yellen said during her confirmation hearing that as long as we have unemployment — and by the way we're 8.6 million jobs short of where we were last year — it's going to be very hard to pass a tax increase. I think the process is going to start for some sort of major tax increases. Certainly you're going to see them proposed by the Democrats and will there be enough political momentum and enough economic growth that people feel comfortable doing something like that.

It's really hard to see past where this goes. Now it may all fizzle and disappear, or it may be the biggest thing that happened in a long time. I can't say about 12 months from now because I can't even see six months from now where we're going to be.

David Stewart: Well as somebody who covers tax news for a living, I hope for something big. Ty and Marty, this has been fantastic. Thank you both for being here.

Tynisa Gaines: Thank you for having me. I appreciate it.

Martin Sullivan: David, Ty, thanks very much. Been a pleasure.

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