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Priorities Being Set as Tax Teams Focus on 2025 Tax Bill
New Tax Family Business Tax Survey Gives Focus for Capitol Hill Tax Teams
It’s looking more and more like a salvage operation on Capitol Hill as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions are being examined, culled, embellished, and reconstituted before it expires at the end of next year.
But no matter, good, bad, or ugly, there will be a new tax bill in 2025 and the priorities for family businesses are taking shape.
As I write this, the House Ways and Means Committee is busy managing its ten Tax Teams to improve or save what it can from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA).
A few items on the salvage list include avoiding increased income taxes, stopping a decrease in estate tax lifetime exemptions, no increases in capital gains taxes, and restoring research and development expensing, to name a few.
As you may recall, the House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Jason Smith (R-MO) and Tax Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Mike Kelly (R- PA) formed ten Tax Teams earlier this year to study key provisions in the Trump-era TCJA.
The Tax Teams are set up as follows: American Manufacturing, Working Families, American Workforce, Main Street, New Economy, Rural America, Community Development, Supply Chains, U.S. Innovation, and Global Competitiveness. The stated goal of these teams is to: “help families, workers, and small businesses,” according to Smith.
What Are Key Tax Priorities?
But what are the key family business-oriented tax policies critical for our legislators to review?
Our tax team experts on Capitol Hill have uncovered seven “Tax Policy Legislative Priorities” for the 119th Congress.
In addition, this month we conducted a spot survey among 100 family businesses asking one question: “what is your number one tax priority?”
But first, what are our seven Tax Policy Legislative Priorities? Here they are:
- Preserve the current tax rates and brackets enacted under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Family-owned businesses rely on the consistency of tax rates more than corporate businesses due to the increased complexity in succession planning. In addition, family businesses are uniquely suited to reinvest more in their business, their employees, and their communities, according to the results of our 2024 Annual Business Survey. In our survey, 52% of respondents indicated that if they paid less in taxes, they would invest more in the business, and 30% indicating they would raise their employees’ salaries.
- Reduce the estate tax rate. Estate taxes severely hamper the ability for family business owners to pass the business and related assets (which are typically illiquid) to the next generation, making it more difficult for the business to continue growing, providing important jobs, and contributing to local communities.Of family businesses surveyed, 70% have generational employees and 81% have been in operation for 20 years or more. Eliminating the estate tax consistently ranks among the top three priorities.
- Make permanent the Section 199A deduction for passthrough businesses. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act included a new deduction to help ensure business owners pay tax rates more comparable to the corporate tax rate reduced by the TCJA. If allowed to expire, the section 199A deduction will be uniquely and severely disadvantage passthrough businesses. Of family businesses surveyed in our annual study, 78% operate as passthrough businesses, whether a partnership, LLC, S corporation, or other non-corporate structure.
- Restore the full deductibility of research and development (R&D) expenses. The R&D deduction has historically been a bipartisan issue, gaining support from both parties in discussions on economically beneficial provisions to include in a 2025 tax bill. According to our family business survey, 22% of family-owned businesses are in the manufacturing/operations industry and 11% are in the construction/facilities industry, which rely heavily on R&D investment.
- Restore 100% bonus depreciation. Next to their commitment to their employees, family-owned businesses rely on capital investments to compete, grow, and thrive. Bonus depreciation is a critical tool for family businesses to support their capital investments and finance facilities and equipment critical to their ability to grow, expand employment, and contribute to the communities in which they operate.
- Preserve the capital-gains tax rate. Like the estate tax, the capital-gain taxes present an obstacle for capital formation and investments necessary for family businesses to expand, modernize, and succeed in an increasingly competitive market, with 13% of family businesses ranking it in their top three tax policies of concern – a 4% increase over the 2023 Survey.
- Prevent the creation of a wealth tax. Wealth taxes – taxes on existing assets and unrealized gains – will be particularly harmful to family business owners who often disproportionately invest in the business in the hopes of passing it on to the future generations. In the most recent Family Business Survey, respondents identified preventing a “Wealth Tax” as one of their top five economic priorities – a concern that was nonexistent in prior years.
Top Of Mind Taxes
To further solidify thinking on tax priorities, this month we conducted a “spot poll” of 100 family-owned businesses on the topic of taxes in 33 states.
In this “Tax Policy Priorities Poll” we asked what their greatest tax concerns were right now, from increases in income taxes, to no increases in estate taxes, to restoring research and development expensing. The results showed the following percentage ranking for the top tax concerns by family business respondents.
The top concern was “No decrease in Estate Tax Lifetime Exemption,” which received 30% of votes from respondents.
In a close second place, family businesses want to see “No Increase in the Income Tax Rate,” which received 28% of votes.
When it came to “No Increase in Capital Gains Tax Rate,” 13% respondents felt this was a top tax concern, while “Establishment of a Wealth tax” received 11% as a top priority. The “Wealth Tax” worry is trending upward.
Finally, such priorities as “Keep 199A Deduction for Pass Through Entity” worried 10% of family business respondents, while “Restoring R & D Expensing” got 4% of the vote. Lastly, when asked the question about “Restoring Bonus Depreciation,” only 3% replied this was a top priority.
Let Congress Know
Nobody knows what Congress, or the new White House, will ultimately agree on when it comes to taxes, or how they will manage the growing gap between revenues and expenses, but everyone agrees there will be a new tax bill in 2025…good, bad, or ugly.
The only way to state your case is to voice your concerns. The next Congressional Family Business Caucus Meeting was held on Sept. 18 and in the meeting addressed pass-through taxes, enterprise structure, and possible wealth tax legislation.
There will be three more meetings in 2025, but these will be the last chance to speak up about your tax concerns.
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The need for fact-based reporting of issues important to multi generational businesses and protecting a lifetime of savings has never been greater. Now more than ever, multi generational businesses and family businesses are under fire. That's why Family Enterprise USA is passionately working to increase the awareness of issues important to generationally-owned family businesses built on hard work, while continuing to strengthen our presence on Capitol Hill. The issues we fight for or against with Congress in Washington DC include high income tax rates, possible elimination of valuation discounts, increase in capital gains tax, enactment of a wealth tax, and the continued burden of the gift tax, estate tax and generation skipping tax.
Family Enterprise USA promotes generationally owned family business creation, growth, viability, and sustainability by advocating for family businesses and their lifetime of savings with Congress in Washington DC. Since 2007, Family Enterprise USA has represented and celebrated all sizes, professions and industries of family-owned enterprises and multi-generational employers. It is a bi-partisan 501.c3 organization. Family foundations can donate.
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