American Recovery and Reinvestment Act — Sufficient Stimulus?
By Erik Cagle - Senior Editor
May 1, 2009
Reprinted with permission from NAPCO/Printing
Impressions
THERE MAY be a new man in the White House, but the country
is enjoying another stimulus shot to counter what is now
acknowledged as a full-blown recession-and, like the flu vaccine,
not everyone agrees on how much good, if any, it will do for the
average American. From a business perspective, however, it's a
no-brainer.
President Barack Obama and his American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 are offering relief in an effort to
wiggle the country out of the worst recession in decades. Signed
into law February 17, the $787 billion economic stimulus package,
among other things, extended both the enhanced IRC Section 179
Expensing (a.k.a. small business expensing) and the 50 percent
Bonus Depreciation provisions through the end of 2009. They were
both components of the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008.
A quick review: under bonus depreciation, businesses are
allowed to immediately write off 50 percent of the cost of
appreciable property acquired and installed during 2009. With the
small business expensing, companies can write off a maximum of
$250,000 of capital expenditures in 2009, to a phase-out once capex
exceeds $800,000.
ARRA also includes an Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) patch for
2009, a $70 billion tax extension that should shield about 26
million taxpayers from the AMT.
Two-Year Survival Plan
Companies currently in a loss position can also benefit from
the longer net operating loss (NOL) carryback period. It gives
small businesses in the red the ability to get immediate refunds of
income taxes paid in earlier years. For NOLs in a tax year
beginning or ending in 2008, ARRA allows eligible small firms to
increase the carryback period from two to as many as five years.
Eligible businesses qualify with $15 million (or less) in average
gross receipts.
Printing Industries of America was disappointed with the NOL
carryback provision, and wrote letters to Congressional Democrats
and Republicans to pass legislation extending the net operating
loss carryback period to five years for 2008 and 2009. All in all,
reports Lisbeth Lyons, director of Government Affairs for PIA, it
is a step in the right direction for printers.
"There's a lot more spending in the stimulus than there were
tax incentives," she notes. "However, the tax incentives that were
included feature some good provisions for business. We're always
supportive of these types of tax incentives to help jump-start the
manufacturing economy."
Stuart Margolis, a principal of the firm MargolisBecker and
a CPA serving the printing industry, is a big fan of the bonus
depreciation element of the package. It's a tact that has worked
well in the past, he notes, but maybe not so much in this tough
economic climate.
"The problem I see is that, in 2009, a lot of companies
aren't going to be paying taxes anyway because they're not making
money," he says. "So, if they buy a piece of equipment, it's not
going to reduce their taxes because there's no taxes being paid by
the corporation; there's no planned profit. Hence, there's no
benefit to using the tax provision."
Among some of the other ARRA provisions: the Work
Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) rewards employers that hire
individuals from target groups, such as disabled veterans. This
applies to individuals who are hired and begin work in 2009 and
2010.
Another feature is the delayed recognition of certain
cancellation of debt income. Previously, a taxpayer generally has
income where the taxpayer cancels or repurchases its debt for an
amount less than its adjusted issue price. The amount of
cancellation of debt income (or CODI) is the excess of the old
debt's adjusted issue price over the repurchase price. Some
businesses will be permitted to recognize CODI over 10 years-defer
tax on it for the first four to five years, and recognize this
income ratably over the following five taxable years-for specified
types of business debt repurchased by the business after December
31, 2008, and prior to January 1, 2011.
Estimated tax payment relief is also available, allowing
small business owners the chance to make lower quarterly estimated
tax payments. With ARRA, if an individual earned more than 50
percent of his/her gross income in 2008 from a business that
employed fewer than 500 people, then the estimated quarterly
payments for 2009 will not exceed 90 percent of the tax liability
shown on his/her 2008 tax return.
The one glaring omission from the package, which Margolis
feels would make a tangible difference, is the need for bank
credit. "The only way to manage a company that's losing money is to
be able to borrow money to cover it. I tell printers, if they're
having a hard time, the objective isn't to make money, but to
survive the next two years. If you can survive, there will be fewer
printers left, and the potential for making money will be higher
than it normally would be. Survival would happen a lot easier if
more credit were readily available.
"The credit issue is what caused the economic downturn to
begin with," he contends. "The bailout helped the banks, but the
banks are still very stingy with the money and they're not passing
it out, especially to small businesses. The bailout didn't
accommodate, in a sense, an investment in the economy. It just
allowed the banks to survive."
Gauging Success
Ronnie Davis, vice president and chief economist for the
PIA, feels the short-run impact of ARRA should be "slightly
positive" in accelerating the recovery and shortening the duration
of the recession. The degree of success, according to Davis, hinges
on four elements:
• How much of the package is composed of spending on
goods and services or tax cuts that result in actual economic
output (Gross Domestic Product)?
• How much of this economic activity from the relevant
spending and tax cuts will actually take place this year and early
next year in time to speed-up the recovery, which will eventually
happen anyway?
• Will there be a "multiplier" impact of this
spending, if any? In an economy with a lot of slack, Davis notes
the extra resources from the "stimulus" may be otherwise idle and
the multiplier may actually be greater than one. He says that some
politicians and analysts project a multiplier of up to 1.5 for
ARRA-which he feels is an unlikely number. In a "full employment"
economy, the net impact would be zero since the resources would be
otherwise employed.
In today's economy and for the short run, Davis estimates an
in-between multiplier of considerably less than one but greater
than zero.
• The psychological factor of consumers and investors
believing something positive has been accomplished, and returning
to more normal behavior.
"My educated guess is that the package may add around 0.5
percent to GDP in the second half of this year and the first half
of next year, or about $75 billion over the 12 months from mid-2009
to mid-2010," Davis remarks. "My numbers are more conservative than
the Congressional Budget Office estimates (and much more
conservative than the President's advisors), but I believe they are
overestimating both the multiplier impact and speed of the
spending.
"The longer term net impact beyond 2010 will most likely be
negative as the higher proportion of 'temporary' government
spending and increased debt becomes permanent, and acts as an
anchor on the economy."
PI
Reprinted with permission from
NAPCO/Printing Impressions