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Individual and business extenders and other relief provisions in the 2008 Extenders Act (MS Word)
Individual and business extenders and other relief provisions in the 2008 Extenders Act (.pdf)
Individual and business extenders and other relief provisions in the 2008 Extenders Act
Dear Reader,
The “Tax Extenders and Alternative Minimum Tax Relief Act of 2008”
(the 2008 Extenders Act), which was enacted on Oct. 3, 2008,
provides extensions for several popular tax breaks and the addition
of several new relief provisions, including disaster area tax
relief. Here's an overview of the key provisions in the new
legislation:
Deduction of state and local general sales taxes.
The option to deduct state and local general sales taxes is extended
through 2009.
Qualified tuition deduction.
The above-the-line tax deduction for qualified higher education
expenses is extended through 2009.
Teacher expense deduction.
The provision allowing teachers an above-the-line deduction for up
to $250 for educational expenses is extended through 2009.
IRA rollover provision.
The provision allowing qualified taxpayers to make tax-free
contributions from their IRA plans to qualified charitable
organizations is extended through 2009.
Additional standard deduction for real property taxes.
The standard deduction for real property taxes for nonitemizers is
extended through 2009.
Research and development credit.
The research tax credit is extended through 2009. In addition, the
alternative simplified credit is increased from 12% to 14% for the
2009 tax year, and the alternative incremental research is repealed
for the 2009 tax year.
15-year straight-line cost recovery for qualified leasehold,
restaurant, and retail improvements.
The 15-year writeoff for qualified leasehold, restaurant and retail
improvements is extended through 2008.
Basis adjustment to stock of an S corporation making charitable
contributions of property.
Favorable Subchapter S basis rules for gifts of appreciated property
are extended through 2009.
Deduction allowable with respect to income attributable to domestic
production activities in Puerto Rico.
The provision allowing a Section 199 domestic production activities
deduction for activities in Puerto Rico is extended through 2009.
Other extended provisions.
Other provisions extended through 2009 include:
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Qualified zone academy bonds.
-
Indian employment credit.
-
Accelerated depreciation for business property on Indian
reservation.
-
Tax credit for certain expenditures for maintaining railroad
tracks.
-
7-year recovery period for certain motorsports racetrack
property.
-
Work opportunity tax credit for Hurricane Katrina employees.
-
New markets tax credit.
-
Increased rehabilitation credit for structures in the Gulf
Opportunity Zone.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for qualified computer
contributions.
-
Tax incentives for investments in the District of Columbia.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for food inventory.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for contributions of book
inventory to schools.
-
Special expensing rules for certain film and television
productions.
-
Exception under Subpart F for active financing income.
Revenue raisers.
The new legislation offsets the cost of the tax break extensions by
requiring hedge fund managers and others to account for deferred
compensation (income held in offshore accounts and other corporate
structures) as it accrues, rather than avoiding appropriate and
timely income taxes.
Additional tax relief provisions.
In addition to the extensions of tax relief described above, the
2008 Extenders Act also includes liberalizations for the child tax
credit, income averaging for Exxon Valdez litigation amounts, a
5-year writeoff for certain farming equipment, and a change in the
standards for imposition of the tax return preparer penalty.
Disaster relief.
Included in the new legislation is Midwestern disaster area tax
relief for victims of the disaster in Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska and Wisconsin,
and a new tax relief package for victims of all Federally-declared
disasters occurring after Dec. 31, 2007 and before Jan. 1, 2010
(e.g., eased loss deduction rules, a new business writeoff for
demolition, cleanup and repair, a 5-year carryback for casualty
losses or qualified disaster expenses, bonus 50% first year
depreciation for property placed in service through Dec. 31, 2011
(Dec. 31, 2012 for real property), and increased expensing dollar
limits).
I hope this information is helpful. If you would like more details about these changes, or any other aspects of the new law, please do not hesitate to call.
Lewes CPA
office