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5/12/2020

Administration's FY2013 Budget Proposes Tax Policy to Boost Growth, Create Jobs and Improve Opportunity for Middle Class

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Press Center

Administration's FY2013 Budget Proposes Tax Policy to Boost Growth, Create Jobs
and Improve Opportunity for Middle Class
2/13/2012

View the full Greenbook here.

“This fiscal plan entails a carefully designed set of investments and reforms to boost growth, create jobs and improve opportunity for
middle-class Americans. These proposals strike the balance between supporting growth and laying out a responsible, long-term deficit
reduction plan that simplifies the tax code and asks the most fortunate to pay their fair share.”
— Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner

The FY2013 Greenbook Includes Policies that:
Boost Near-Term Growth and Job Creation by:
Extending the two percentage point payroll tax cut through the end of 2012.
Extending the 100-percent bonus depreciation provision through 2012.
Providing a 10-percent tax credit for new jobs and payroll increases focused on
small business through 2012.
Providing tax credits to support domestic clean energy manufacturing.
Provide Permanent Tax Relief for Middle-Class Families by:
Making the American Opportunity Tax Credit permanent, providing up to $10,000
per student over four years and $137 billion in additional higher education tax
relief over the next 10 years.
Permanently expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit to support working
families.
Permanently increasing the tax credit for child and dependent care by up to 75
percent.
Improving retirement security by providing for automatic enrollment in IRAs.
Draw Manufacturing Investments to our Shores and Help Onshore Jobs by:

Providing tax incentives for locating jobs and business activity in the United
States and prohibiting tax deductions for shipping jobs overseas.
Creating a new “Manufacturing Communities” tax credit to encourage
investments in communities affected by military base closures, plant closures,
and mass layoffs.
Focus the domestic production activities deduction on manufacturing, with a
larger deduction for advanced manufacturing activities, and disallowing the
deduction for oil and other fossil fuel production.
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1414.aspx

The President’s Fiscal Year 2013
(FY2013) Budget demonstrates his
continued commitment to addressing
the two key imperatives we face today
– supporting growth and job creation,
now and into the future, while making
the necessary fiscal reforms to bring
down projected deficits. Though often
viewed as separate, these goals
complement and depend upon each
other. Stronger growth now and
investments in future productivity will
make our future debt challenges more
manageable, while locking in credible
deficit reduction, phased in to protect
the fragile economy, will allow us to
invest in strengthening growth and job
creation now.
Today, the U.S. Department of the
Treasury released a key document that
points the way toward meeting these
intertwined challenges – the General
Explanations of the Administration's
FY2013 Revenue Proposals, or
“Greenbook.” The Greenbook explains
the Administration’s revenue proposals
included in the Budget that seek to
boost near-term growth; provide
permanent middle-class tax relief;
encourage onshore investments in
manufacturing and insourced jobs; cut
taxes for small businesses; add
balance to deficit reduction by asking
the most fortunate Americans to
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Administration's FY2013 Budget Proposes Tax Policy to Boost Growth, Create Jobs and Improve Opportunity for Middle Class

Enhancing the research and experimentation (R&E) credit and making it
permanent.
Add to the 17 Small Business Tax Cuts the President has Already Signed into
Law by:
Permanently eliminating the capital gains tax on certain small business
investments.
Doubling the amount of currently deductible start-up expenditures.
Expanding and simplifying the Small Business Health Care Tax Credit.
Ask the Most Fortunate to Contribute to Balanced, Credible Deficit Reduction
by:
Allowing the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts to expire (including taxing dividends as
ordinary income) for households making more than $250,000 per year.
Restoring the estate tax to 2009 levels.
Limiting tax expenditures for the affluent by capping itemized deductions and
certain other deductions and income exclusions at 28 percent.
Eliminating the carried interest loophole for hedge fund managers and other
similar investment service providers. Eliminating a special depreciation loophole
for corporate jets.
Limit Incentives to Shift Income and Assets Overseas by:
Closing loopholes and ending abuses—like transfer pricing abuses that shift intangible income and assets
overseas—to produce $148 billion in savings over the next 10 years.

contribute; and limit incentives for
shifting income and assets overseas.
The President is committed to working
with Congress to undertake
comprehensive tax reform to cut tax
rates and complexity, cut inefficient tax
breaks, cut the deficit by $1.5 trillion,
and increase jobs and growth in the
United States—while observing the
“Buffett Rule” that people making more
than $1 million should not pay a
smaller share of their income in taxes
than the middle class pays.
As a contribution to the national
conversation about tax reform, the
President’s Budget includes a detailed
set of specific tax loophole closers and
measures to broaden the tax base that,
together with the expiration of the highincome tax cuts, would exceed the $1.5
trillion deficit reduction target for tax
reform, cut inefficient tax expenditures,
and move the tax system closer to
observing the Buffett Rule.
JUMPSTART GROWTH

Extend the payroll tax cut. Under the compromise
tax package passed at the end of 2010, the
employee Social Security payroll tax rate was reduced temporarily from 6.2 percent to 4.2 percent for 2011. This reduction was further extended in December, but only through
the end of February 2012. The Budget proposes to extend the payroll tax cut through the end of 2012, providing a total of $1,000 in tax relief in 2012 for a household earning
$50,000. Extending the payroll tax cut would provide $94 billion in benefits over the next 10 years.
Extend 100-percent first-year depreciation deduction for certain property. As part of the compromise tax package passed at the end of 2010, additional first-year
depreciation was increased to 100 percent for qualified property through the end of 2011. The Budget proposes to extend this powerful incentive for businesses to invest for an
additional year. Extending 100 percent depreciation would provide $58 billion dollars in benefits in tax year 2012, at a time when tax relief is needed.
Provide a temporary 10-percent tax credit for new jobs and wage increases. The Budget proposes to provide a new income tax credit for employers who increase their
payroll, whether through job creation, increased wages, or both. The maximum amount of the increase in eligible wages would be $5 million per employer, targeting the 98
percent of firms that have a payroll below that threshold, for a maximum credit of $500,000. The credit would be available for wage increases in 2012 and would provide $18
billion in benefits over the next 10 years.
Providing temporary tax credits for domestic clean energy manufacturing. The President is proposing to extend tax credits to drive nearly $20 billion of investment in
domestic clean energy manufacturing, ensuring new windmills and solar panels will incorporate parts that are produced and assembled by American workers. This Advanced
Energy Manufacturing Tax Credit – which was oversubscribed more than three times over – goes to investments in clean energy manufacturing in the United States. The
additional $5 billion in tax credits the President is proposing will leverage nearly $20 billion in total investment in the United States.

TAX RELIEF FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES
Make the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) permanent. Currently authorized through 2012, the AOTC provides
taxpayers a credit of up to $2,500 per eligible student per year for qualified tuition and related expenses paid for each of the first four
years of the student’s post-secondary education. The Budget proposes to make the AOTC permanent, providing up to $10,000 for a
student in their family over four years in college. More than 9 million families with students will receive an average AOTC of nearly
$2,000 in 2012. Making the AOTC permanent would provide $137 billion in additional benefits over the next 10 years.
Expand the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to support working families. The EITC is available to low- and moderate-income
working families. The Budget proposes to make permanent an expansion of the EITC for families with three or more qualifying
children. This provision will increase the credit for larger families by up to 12.5 percent, or nearly $675 in 2013. More than 2 million
families will receive an average increase in EITC of nearly $600 as a result of this provision in 2012. This proposal would provide
$14 billion in benefits over the next 10 years.
Provide for automatic enrollment in individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Only about half of American employees today are
covered by a pension plan at work. This proposal will improve retirement security for millions of workers by requiring employers with
more than 10 employees, who do not offer a retirement plans, to offer an automatic IRA. With an automatic IRA, retirement savings
are deducted from each paycheck and deposited in the worker’s own account. Employers do not make contributions, and
employees can opt out of the program at any time. The proposal also includes a credit to help small employers set up auto-IRA
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Administration's FY2013 Budget Proposes Tax Policy to Boost Growth, Create Jobs and Improve Opportunity for Middle Class

arrangements, and it doubles the existing start-up credit for small employers who offer a retirement plan, such as a traditional
pension or 401(k). This proposal would provide $15 billion in benefits over the next 10 years.
Preserve Middle-Class Tax Relief. The Administration’s Budget also assumes that the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts are made
permanent for lower- and middle-class families, saving them about $1 trillion over the next 10 years.
EXPAND MANUFACTURING AND INSOURCING JOBS IN AMERICA
Provide tax incentives for locating jobs and business activity in the United States and prohibit tax deductions for shipping jobs overseas. The Budget proposes to create a credit
against income tax equal to 20 percent of the expenses paid or incurred in connection with insourcing a U.S. trade or business. The proposal would disallow deductions for
expenses paid or incurred in connection with outsourcing a U.S. trade or business to reduce incentives for U.S. companies to move jobs offshore. Together providing tax
incentives to insource jobs and prohibiting tax deductions for outsourcing jobs would largely cancel each other out, costing a total of $90 million over the next 10 years.
Provide a new “Manufacturing Communities” tax credit. The Budget proposes to create a new tax credit to encourage investments in communities affected by military base
closures, plant closures, and mass layoffs. This proposal would provide about $2 billion in credits for qualified investments approved in each of three years, 2012 through 2014.
Target the domestic activities production deduction to domestic manufacturing activities and provide a larger deduction for advanced manufacturing activities. The Budget
proposes to disallow the deduction for domestic production activities (commonly referred to as the manufacturing deduction) for oil and other fossil fuel production, as well as for
certain other nonmanufacturing activities. The revenue resulting from this limitation would be used to increase the general deduction percentage and double the deduction rate
even more for activities involving the manufacture of certain advanced technology property. This proposal is approximately revenue neutral.
Enhance the research and experimentation (R&E) credit and make it permanent. The Budget proposes to enhance the R&E tax credit by increasing the credit rate for the
alternative simplified credit from 14 percent to 17 percent and making it permanent to encourage innovation and reward businesses that continue to invest in research projects.
Making the credit permanent would remove uncertainty about whether the R&E credit will be extended, giving businesses greater confidence to invest in innovation that creates
jobs in the United States This proposal would provide $109 billion in benefits over 10 years.

TAX RELIEF FOR SMALL BUSINESS
Permanently eliminate capital gains tax on investments in qualified small business stock. The Budget would make permanent the President’s proposal to completely eliminate
the capital gains tax for investors in certain qualified small businesses. This provision was enacted as part of the Small Business Jobs Act and was extended through 2011 as
part of the December tax compromise. Making this provision permanent-- and also making it easier to use by giving investors a longer time to roll over qualified investments and
making sure that the income is not subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax—would save small business owners $8 billion over the next 10 years.
Double the amount of currently deductible start-up expenditures. Under current law, a taxpayer generally is allowed to elect to deduct up to $5,000 of start-up expenditures in the
year a business begins and to amortize any remaining costs. For 2010 only, the immediately deductible amount was doubled, from $5,000 to $10,000 (reduced by the amount
by which the cumulative cost of start-up expenditures exceeds $60,000). The Budget proposes to permanently increase the immediate deduction amount to $10,000. This
would save entrepreneurs about $3 billion over the next 10 years.
Expand and simplify the small business health care tax credit. The Affordable Care Act created a new tax credit, effective beginning in 2010, that covers up to 35 percent (rising
to 50 percent in 2014) of an eligible employer’s premium contributions towards their employees’ health insurance. The Budget proposes to expand the tax credit to additional
employers (including by increasing the eligibility cut-off from 25 to 50 workers), change the phase-out formula so firms that appear eligible will qualify for some credit, and simplify
the calculation of the credit (by removing a requirement that an eligible employer pay a uniform percentage of the premium for each employee and also eliminating a cap on the
credit based on the average health insurance premium in the employer’s state). This would provide an additional $14 billion in tax relief to small business owners over the next
10 years.

A CREDIBLE AND BALANCED PLAN TO ADDRESS BUDGET DEFICITS
Allow the 2001 and 2003 income tax cuts to expire (including the low tax rate on dividends) for households making more than $250,000 per year and restore the estate tax to
2009 levels. The last decade saw massive tax cuts targeted disproportionately at the most affluent Americans. While the President accepted a temporary extension of the highincome tax cuts at the end of 2010 as part of a compromise to protect the middle-class tax cuts and provide an important boost to the economy, the high-income tax cuts do very
little to support economic growth. Moreover, they give an average of more than $100,000 in tax breaks to those earning more than $1 million per year, making our tax system
less fair, and are unaffordable in light of our fiscal situation. Sustaining these unaffordable high-income tax cuts would require either borrowing more, increasing taxes on the
middle-class, or deep cuts in other parts of the Budget that help seniors, the middle-class, and the most vulnerable. The President’s Budget would instead reflect shared
sacrifice by allowing income tax rates that exclusively affect upper-income households to return to the levels they were at throughout most of the 1990s; tax dividends as ordinary
income for married taxpayers with income more than $250,000 and single taxpayers with income more than $200,000; and restore the tax on large estates to 2009
levels. Allowing these temporary tax cuts to expire as scheduled at the end of 2012 will avoid increasing the deficit by nearly $1 trillion over the next 10 years.
Limit certain tax expenditures for the most affluent by capping itemized deductions at 28 percent. The Budget proposes to limit the tax subsidy for itemized deductions for highincome families to 28 percent – the same level that was in place at the end of the Reagan Administration. This year’s proposal builds on the legislative language in the American
Jobs Act and expands the limitation to other deductions and income exclusions claimed by high income taxpayers such as tax-exempt state and local bond interest, contributions
to retirement accounts, employer-sponsored health insurance, and deductions for income attributable to domestic production activities. It would raise more than $580 billion over
the next 10 years.
Eliminate the carried interest loophole for hedge fund managers and other similar investment service providers. The 2013 Budget proposes to change the tax treatment of
carried interests in investment partnerships, which present the greatest opportunity for highly compensated service providers to be taxed on their services income (the earnings
they receive for performing services) at capital gains rates, which are lower than the tax rates most moderate-income Americans pay on their earnings. Closing this loophole
would raise more than $13 billion over the next 10 years.
Eliminate special depreciation rules for purchases of corporate jets and other general aviation passenger aircraft. Under current law, airplanes used in commercial and contract
carrying of passengers and freight generally are depreciated over seven years. Airplanes not used in commercial or contract carrying of passengers or freight, such as corporate
jets, generally are depreciated over five years. The Budget proposes to increase the depreciation recovery period for general aviation airplanes that carry passengers to seven
years. Closing this loophole would raise $2 billion over 10 years.

INTERNATIONAL PROPOSALS

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Combating transfer pricing abuses. President Obama and Secretary Geithner are committed to rolling back incentives to shift income and assets overseas. A prime example is
“transfer pricing” abuse – when multinational corporations effectively transfer intangible assets like copyrights and trademarks to subsidiaries in overseas tax havens at artificially
low prices. Transfer pricing abuse shifts profits overseas while avoiding the taxes they would pay on a fairly priced transaction. Under the Budget proposal, excessive profits
related to the offshore use of transferred intangibles would be taxable in the United States, thus restricting the tax incentive to engage in transfer pricing abuses. This proposal,
along with a related proposal to clarify the definition of intangible assets, would raise more than $23 billion over the next 10 years.
Other reforms to reduce incentives to shift income and assets overseas. In addition to transfer pricing reform, the Budget includes a broader package of international tax reforms
that has been designed to reduce incentives to shift income and assets overseas. For example, U.S. businesses that borrow money and invest it overseas can claim the interest
they pay as a business expense and take an immediate deduction to reduce their U.S. taxes under current law, even if they pay little or no U.S. taxes on their overseas
investment. The Budget would eliminate this tax advantage for overseas investment by requiring that the deduction for the interest expense attributable to overseas investment
be delayed, saving $37 billion over the next 10 years. Overall, the Budget’s proposals to reform international tax rules will raise $148 billion over the next 10 years.

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