
The Bush Tax Cut Bill &
Understanding the 2003 Tax Law
Jobs & Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of
2003
Congress
reacted to President Bush's 2003 $726B tax reduction proposal from earlier this
year by drafting numerous proposals of their own. On Wednesday, May 28,
President Bush signed the resulting $350B Jobs & Growth Tax Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2003 into law.
This
act includes some features that are similar to the president's original
proposal, yet, as tax law tends to be, it is sprinkled with subtle and easy-to
miss (or, misunderstand) details.
To
help you understand what is included in the new law, the experts at TurboTax
have outlined key provisions below.
Child Tax Credit
|
New 2003 Law |
|
Credit
= $1,000 per qualifying child This
will be effective in 2003 and 2004. Rebate
checks will be sent out for the 2003 credit, starting in July 2003, based on
2002 tax returns filed in 2003. A
qualifying child is: · under age
17 · a son,
daughter (or other descendent), step child, or eligible foster child · allowed
as a dependent of the taxpayer · a U.S.
citizen or resident Result: Lower tax bills and/or rebate checks of up to $400
per child. The credit begins to phase out for taxpayers with adjusted gross
incomes over: · $110,000
(for married taxpayers filing jointly) · $75,000
(for unmarried individuals), and · $55,000
(for married taxpayers filing separately). |
Marriage Penalty Relief (for taxpayers claiming the Standard Deduction)
|
New 2003 Law |
|
For
taxpayers who are 1) married, 2) filing jointly, and 3) claiming the standard
deduction: · increase
the amount of the standard deduction to $9,500 (exactly twice that of single
taxpayers) The standard deduction for taxpayers who are married but
file separately is the same as for single filers. This will be effective in 2003 and 2004. Result: Lower tax bills for married couples that claim the
standard deduction (and don’t itemize) because the amount of the standard
deduction is increased. |
Marriage Penalty Relief (for taxpayers in the 15% tax bracket)
|
New 2003 Law |
|
Increase
the size of the 15% tax bracket for married couples filing joint returns to
twice that of the 15% bracket for single filers. This
change will be effective in 2003 and 2004. Result: Lower tax bills for married couples because more
income will be taxed at the lower 15% rate. |
10% Tax Bracket
|
New 2003 Law |
||||||
This
change will be effective in 2003 and 2004. The
bracket will be adjusted in 2004 for inflation. Result: lower tax bills because more income will be taxed
at the lowest rate. |
Lower Tax Rates
|
New 2003 Law |
|||||||
|
Accelerate
tax rate reductions that were scheduled for 2004 & 2006.
Result: Lower tax bills for those in the top four tax
brackets because rates have been cut at least two percentage points per
bracket. Those who will benefit in 2003 are taxpayers with incomes over: · $28,400
(single) · $56,800
(married filing jointly, and qualifying widow(er)s) · $38,050
(head of household), and · $28,400
(married filing separately) |
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
|
New 2003 Law |
||||||||
|
Increase
the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) exemption amount.
This
change will be effective in 2003 and 2004. Result: Taxpayers that would be subject to the AMT as a
result of newly lower regular tax rates are given additional protection from
this parallel tax. |
Bonus Depreciation
|
New 2003 Law |
|
Additional
1st year (bonus) depreciation = 50%. This
increase would apply to business property that is currently eligible for 30%
bonus depreciation and is placed in service after May 5, 2003 and before
January 1, 2005. This
is effective for taxable years ending after May 5, 2003. Result: Lower tax bills for people that purchase
cars and equipment used in business because the cost can more immediately be
written off as an expense. |
Section 179
|
New 2003 Law |
|
The
annual Section 179 expense amount = $100,000 (for qualified property placed
into service in 2003, 2004, and 2005. The
amount of eligible property that may be placed in service before taxpayers
start to lose the ability to claim this deduction = $400,000 per year. The
dollar limits will be indexed annually for inflation after 2003 and before
2006. Off-the-shelf
computer software placed in service during 2003 through 2005 will now be
eligible for section 179 deduction treatment. This
proposal now allows taxpayers to make or revoke section 179 expensing
elections (for taxable years beginning in 2003 through 2005) on amended
returns without the consent of the IRS. This means that a taxpayer could
potentially offset additional income reported on an amended tax return with a
section 179 deduction. This
change is in effect for tax years beginning after December 31, 2002. Result: Lower tax bills for people that purchase cars and
equipment used in business because the cost can more immediately be written
off as an expense. |
Capital Gains
|
New 2003 Law |
|
The
maximum tax rates that are levied on adjusted net capital gains = 5% (for
taxpayers in the 10 & 15% brackets; this goes down to 0% in 2008) and
15%. This
change applies to capital assets that are held more than one year and sold or
exchanged at a gain (including any installment payments received) on or after
May 6, 2003 and before January 1, 2009. The
lower rates would apply to both regular tax and the Alternative Minimum Tax. Result: Lower tax bills for those who sell property,
stocks, or mutual funds because long term capital gains are taxed at lower
rates. |
Dividend Tax
|
New 2003 Law |
|
The
amount of tax that is levied on an individual’s qualifying dividends is 5%
(for taxpayers in the 10 & 15% brackets) or 15% (depending upon income). Dividends
received by an individual from domestic and qualified foreign corporations
are eligible for this tax break. This
applies to regular tax as well as Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). The
proposal is effective from 2003 through 2008. Result: Lower tax bills because qualifying dividends are
taxed at lower rates. |
Corporate Estimated Tax Due Date
|
New 2003 Law |
|
25%
of the corporate estimated quarterly tax payments due on September 15, 2003
don’t have to be paid before October 1, 2003. Result: Deferral of a portion of corporate estimated tax
payments. |
State Fiscal Relief
|
New 2003 Law |
|
A
one time allocation of $20 billion will be divided amongst the states: $10
billion is to be used for essential government services and $10 billion is earmarked for Medicaid. |