Raise Hell: Help Lawmakers Make PPP Expenses Tax Deductible

Raise Hell: Help Lawmakers Make PPP Expenses Tax Deductible

As you read this, it’s likely that your lawmakers are
working on the next Payroll Protection Program (PPP) package.

And hopefully, in this next package they will include a
provision that allows you to deduct business expenses that you pay with your
PPP money.

Let’s explain. In the CARES Act, Congress said:

For purposes of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, any
amount which (but for this subsection) would be includible in gross income of
the eligible recipient by reason of forgiveness described in subsection (b)
shall be excluded from gross income.

From what we know, lawmakers thought this meant that the PPP
loan forgiveness was tax-free for you. You probably thought that too. We did.

But then in late April, the IRS issued Notice 2020-32 that
prevents PPP loan recipients from deducting business expenses that were paid
using the PPP monies that gave rise to forgiveness (defined payroll, rent,
utilities, and interest).

Two things to know here:

  1. The PPP loan and forgiveness is a good deal even if the
    expenses are not deductible.
  2. When the CARES Act was passed, it appears that lawmakers
    thought the PPP monies were tax-free and had not considered that the
    expenses paid with the loan proceeds would not be deductible.

Good-Deal Example

ABC Inc., an S corporation, receives a $100,000 PPP loan,
spends it all on defined payroll, and the lender forgives the $100,000.

On its 2020 tax return, ABC reports no PPP income (remember,
it was tax-free), but it may not deduct $100,000 of payroll expenses. The non-deduction
creates $100,000 of net taxable income that ABC, the S corporation, passes on
to its sole shareholder, Bob.

Let’s say Bob is in the 45 percent tax bracket when you
consider both his federal and state income taxes. Bob pays taxes of $45,000 on
this income.

And let’s say that ABC passes to Bob the $100,000 of
tax-exempt income. This puts Bob ahead by $55,000 ($100,000 – $45,000).

A good deal—sure!

But with passage of the CARES Act, Congress was not making a
good deal—it was providing ABC with money for it to remain afloat and continue
paying its employees during the COVID-19 pandemic.

What If It’s Like We
Thought It Was?

If the payroll were deductible, ABC would be ahead by both
the $100,000 and the tax benefit of the payroll being deductible—giving the
company a better chance of continuing to pay its employees after the PPP loan
and its forgiveness.

Since the S corporation doesn’t pay income taxes, let’s look
at Bob. He would have the $100,000 plus the tax benefit of the payroll
deduction ($45,000).

Here’s the comparison:

  • $145,000 if the PPP is as we thought it was
  • $55,000 as the IRS has it now

Unfair—Schedule C Taxpayer
Suffers No Tax Bite

To add one more reason to why the business expenses paid
from PPP loan forgiveness monies should be tax deductible, consider this: the
self-employed taxpayer with no employees has his or her loan forgiven based on
his or her 2019 net income.

There’s no spend on payroll.

The self-employed person does not have to spend any PPP
monies on interest, rent, or utilities. He or she can achieve full forgiveness
in 10.8 weeks based solely on the 2019 tax return.

In its “you can’t deduct it” notice (IRS Notice 2020-32),
the IRS invokes IRC Section 265, but Section 265 does not consider how the PPP
treats forgiveness for the self-employed. It applies to expenses incurred for
the purpose of earning or otherwise producing tax-exempt income.

For the Schedule C taxpayer, no such expenses to produce
tax-exempt income need to be paid to achieve 100 percent forgiveness.

Lawmakers Upset with the
IRS

Let’s start with the fact that the IRS has a tough job. In
many cases, the IRS is nothing more than a referee. If lawmakers fumble the tax
law, the IRS has to call it. No choice.

In a letter to Secretary of the Treasury Mnuchin, Senator Chuck
Grassley, chairman of the committee on finance; Senator Ron Wyden, ranking
member on the committee on finance; and Richard E. Neal, chairman of the
committee on ways and means, jointly stated that the IRS got this wrong and
that the intent of the CARES Act was for the PPP to be a tax-free grant.

The IRS has held firm. That puts the ball back into
lawmakers’ hands, and now it’s their turn. This is where you come in.

Give Them a Nudge

Congress is working on additional COVID-19 legislation. And
we suspect that you will see the new legislation enacted into law before
Congress recesses for its summer break on August 8, 2020.

That means things are moving quickly, and if you want your
voice to be heard, you need to speak now.

To help create the action you desire, do this:

  • S. 3612 is the Senate bill to make the PPP forgiveness
    money used to pay business expenses tax deductible. To express your yea or
    nay on S. 3612, contact your senators. You can find them at this link: https://www.senate.gov/senators/contact
  • H.R. 6821 is the House bill to make the PPP forgiveness
    money used to pay business expenses tax deductible. To express your yea or
    nay on H.R. 6821, contact your representative. You can find him or her at
    this link: https://www.house.gov/representatives

You don’t need to be big and formal about your yea or nay.
You can fax, email, or phone and simply say you support or oppose the bill.
It’s that easy—and it’s effective. Do it.

 

 

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