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92 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1999)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0089 and id is 1 raw text is: Adviory
November 2, 1999 No. 92
MINIMUM WAGE HIKE AND SMALL
BUSINESS TAX RELIEF: THE BAD,
THE GOOD, AND THE UGLY
H.R. 3081 would boost the minimum wage by
$1, from $5.15 to $6.15, or by nearly 20%, over
three years. To help some of the small businesses
that would be adversely affected by the higher
minimum wage, modest small business tax relief
(generally, a truncated version of some of the tax
provisions in the recently vetoed tax bill) would be
enacted.
The hike in the minimum wage would cost tens
of thousands of low skilled workers their jobs. The
burden would fall heaviest on black male teenagers,
whose unemployment rate has averaged over 30% in
1999.
The   higher  labor   costs  would   fall
disproportionately on small businesses that employ
many of the lowest wage workers. The tax relief
being offered small business in compensation for the
higher labor costs is welcome and worthwhile, but
it is not as valuable as the small business relief in
the vetoed tax bill, and it would not restore all the
unskilled jobs lost to the minimum wage hike.
Many of the affected workers will still be hurt, as
would many small businesses. The tax relief would
dampen the job impact only a bit. Small businesses
would be able to increase investment, and there
would be some productivity gains among even the
unskilled that might save some of them from being
fired. Nonetheless, businesses would still want to

substitute higher skilled workers or machinery for
many of the soon to be more costly unskilled labor.
Small business tax relief provisions. H.R. 3081's
five largest tax reductions are:
* trimming the top estate tax rate and changing the
credit to a true exemption (with a true exemption,
the estate tax would begin at a marginal rate of
18%, instead of the current 37%);
 retirement pension reforms;
 accelerating by two years when the self-employed
may claim full deductions for their health insurance
purchases;
- allowing small businesses to expense (i.e., deduct
immediately) up to $30,000 of depreciable asset
purchases, starting in 2000 (under current law, small
businesses could expense up to $25,000 by 2003);
and
0    increasing  the business meals deduction,
excluding  entertainment, to  60%   for  small
businesses (80% for persons subject to hours of
service limitations).
Additional expensing is a good idea, but it
would still be a piddling sum and would still be
phased out for large firms. In an ideal tax system,
all investment would be expensed, not just these
small amounts.
The best help to small business in the bill is the
estate tax relief (available to all estates, not just
small businesses). As of 1999, a unified credit
exempts from tax the first $650,000 of lifetime
transfers (estates and gifts), effectively eliminating
the estate tax brackets below  37%  (see table).
Under current law, the exempt amount will rise to
$675,000 in 2000 and 2001, $700,000 in 2002 and
2003, $850,000 in 2004, $950,000 in 2005, and $1
million in 2006 and thereafter; it will not be
adjusted for inflation. A surtax phases out the
graduated rates and results in a flat 55% tax rate on
large estates.
Under the proposal, the unified credit would be
replaced with an exemption that would ultimately
rise to $1 million. The marginal rates would be
lowered, and the phase-out of the graduated rates in

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N.W., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www. ret.org

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