Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Your Paycheck May be Shrinking! from CNN

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Are you ready to give up $30 a month?

     That's what may come out of your paycheck if -- as expected -- the Making Work Pay tax credit expires at the end of the year.
     The credit was enacted last year as part of the Recovery Act to put more cash in people's pockets. For the past two years, it has boosted paychecks by up to $400 for single filers and $800 for joint filers by reducing the tax withheld and giving a credit for that amount. That's $33 or $67 a month
     Taxpayers who make $75,000 or less are eligible for the full credit, while higher earners can receive partial credit. More than 90% of working Americans have been helped by the tax break.
     Now they will feel the pain when the credit goes away.
     A Senate Finance Committee aide said panel chairman Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, is working on a proposal to extend a number of expiring tax breaks when Congress returns next week.
     Obama proposed an extension months ago, but it's unclear if the administration will fight for it now.
     Tax cut stew for Christmas
     And with only weeks remaining in the lame-duck Congress, the credit is likely on its way out, said Clint Stretch, managing principal of tax policy at Deloitte Tax.
     "I haven't seen any serious effort to extend Making Work Pay," Stretch said. "For this to get passed, somebody in Congress would have to be saying this is a priority, and we just haven't seen that happening."
     Instead, most of the buzz is about the Bush tax cuts, which are also slated to expire at the end of the year.
     Republicans are fighting to extend the Bush cuts for everyone -- including higher income Americans. But Obama, who has promised not to raise taxes on the middle class, is pushing to preserve the cuts only for family income up to $250,000.
     "The most curious aspect of the tax debate is the obsession with taxes at the high end," said Chuck Marr, director of federal tax policy at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. "But when almost every middle and lower class American is going to face higher taxes, nobody's talking about it."
     The big issue with keeping Making Work Pay around is its cost -- about $60 billion to extend it one year.
     "Stimulus is a bad word now, so anything labeled stimulus will not get traction," said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center.
     But if the extension isn't passed, the 110 million families that received higher paychecks in 2009 and 2010 will owe more taxes than they did during those two years.
     "Most people may have no idea they received it and no idea that it's going away," said Marr. "But what you can be certain of is that they'll have less money and they'll spend less -- and this is a terrible time for the economy to lose $60 billion of spending."

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

What's between Black Friday and Cyber Monday? AmEx promotes 'Small Business Saturday'

KAREN MATTHEWS Associated Press


NEW YORK (AP) — Hoping to drum up support for independent merchants, American Express' CEO said Monday that his company will promote "Small Business Saturday" on the weekend after Thanksgiving.
"This is the start of a movement," said Kenneth Chenault, who joined New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg at a City Hall news conference to announce the effort.
Chenault said that large retailers have Black Friday and online retailers have Cyber Monday, "and now, starting on Nov. 27 of this year, small business owners will have Small Business Saturday."
Chenault said the first 10,000 small business owners who sign up to participate will get $100 worth of Facebook advertising. American Express will give a $25 credit to 100,000 of its cardholders who pledge to use their cards at independent businesses on Nov. 27.
Bloomberg said small businesses "are the backbone of our economy and the glue that holds communities together."
American Express will spread the word about Small Business Saturday on Facebook and Twitter, Chenault said.
Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season. The following Monday has in recent years been promoted as Cyber Monday for Internet shopping.
Chenault said Cyber Monday did not catch on immediately and Small Business Friday may not succeed overnight.
"This is not a flash in the pan," he said. "We are committed to this effort for years to come."