“Right now, farms pay taxes under the individual tax code, which has rates as high as 39 percent,” Wolff explained. “There’s going to be a new special rate just for businesses that will cap out at 25 percent. We’re studying it now. We don’t know if it will be good or bad for farmers in the end because farmers are being asked to give up a lot of deductions that they have for that new rate.”
Wolff calls it a bold proposal that she expects to move through Congress quickly. The bill would extend provisions critical to agriculture, in addition to repealing the estate tax, a reform Farm Bureau has long called for.
“Now it doesn’t do that right away, that’s six years out, but it does double the exemptions starting next year, and that will help a lot of farmers and ranchers. The bill continues the deduction for business interest, that’s something that was under attack, and it allows farmers to continue to use cash accounting. This is important because if farmers and ranchers don’t have these tools, they could end up with a tax increase.”
Wolff says tax reform done right means that farmers and ranchers get to keep more of their hard-earned money, and therein lies a big question mark.
“The big question of the day is will the end result be a tax cut for farmers and ranchers. Yes, there’s a new lower business rate for farmers being proposed but there are a lot of changes to the tax deductions and credits that farmers use.”
Wolff says the bill should be passed into law if they make a final determination that it is a benefit for farmers and ranchers.
Source: AFBF