Steven Walters
The State of Politics

Budget Included Big Changes on Taxes

Changes slash Alternative Minimum Tax on the wealthy and reduce “marriage penalty.”

By - Aug 17th, 2015 11:09 am

The new state budget included important changes in tax policy, although they were overshadowed by the controversy over proposed Open Records Law exemptions that would have kept secret all records of who governors and legislators consult on pending issues.

Among the changes that are now law:

 *Parents or guardians of disabled children can set aside up to $14,000 per year by opening a new Achieving a Better Life (ABLE) tax-deferred account. Those who care for the disabled can set aside a total of up to $425,000 to pay their medical and other bills.

*The total amount family members can contribute to Edvest, Wisconsin’s college savings plan, was raised from $330,000 to $425,000.

*More than 690,000 taxpayers will get a new tax break worth a total of $21 million, but not until they file 2016 income taxes. The first step on fixing the so-called “marriage penalty” will only be worth about $30 per taxpayer, however.

*About 35,000 tax filers will save about $24.2 million when they file their 2017 income taxes, because they will no longer be subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).  Without that new break, the number of taxpayers owing the AMT would have soared from 7,656 in tax year 2012 to 38,500 in tax year 2017. As a result of the change, about 2,100 taxpayers will pay the AMT in tax year 2017. 

*Wisconsin’s K-12 teachers can claim a tax deduction of up to $250 per year for classroom school supplies they personally buy. This will save teachers $1.1 million per year in taxes.

*113 new state Department of Revenue auditors and revenue agents will be hired. Of those, 102 will conduct audits that collect more taxes, and 11 will work on collecting outstanding state debts.

Republican Rep. Dale Kooyenga and Republican Sen. Howard Marklein, both Certified Public Accountants and members of the Legislature’s Joint Finance Committee (JFC), drafted the tax policy changes that were added to the 2015-17 budget just before JFC endorsed the sweeping Open Records Law exemptions. Those generated so much criticism that Gov. Scott Walker and Republican leaders had to promise to kill them just two days after JFC approved them.

Kooyenga and Marklein found enough cash elsewhere to cover the cost of their tax cuts. One way they paid for it was by slightly dialing back – from 5.52 percent to 5 percent for this year only – the tax break under the Manufacturing and Agriculture Credit approved two years ago. That one-year reduction will save about $16.8 million.

But the Manufacturing and Agriculture Credit tax break then increases to 7.5 percent in 2016, as scheduled. Democrats have called for limits on or repeal of that credit, saying it’s unfair while the state budget cut $250 million in state aid for the UW System.

In an interview, Kooyenga called the $21-million tax break a “good faith down payment” toward eliminating the marriage penalty. The penalty most hurts families whose two incomes are about equal. If he’s back on JFC in two years, Kooyenga said he will push for another tax-code change to reduce the marriage penalty even more.

Kooyenga said he and Marklein had to delay both the new marriage penalty and AMT tax break because the overall budget had to fix a deficit. The marriage penalty fix won’t begin until tax year 2016; the AMT fix won’t help the wealthiest taxpayers until tax year 2017. In a budget that cut aid to the UW System by $250 million, Kooyenga said, “You really can’t go too crazy on tax cuts.”

Democratic legislators criticize Republicans’ changes that will dramatically reduce – from about 38,500 to 2,100 – the number of taxpayers paying the AMT in tax year 2017. It will most help filers with taxable incomes of between $200,000 and $500,000 according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.

Kooyenga said the AMT fix was needed because, when tax rates were lowered a few years ago, legislators didn’t realize that would force more taxpayers to pay the AMT. “Politicians didn’t realize what they had created,” Kooyenga said. “Not a single Democrat understands the AMT.”

But Democratic Sen. Jon Erpenbach, who is also a JFC member, disagreed. Erpenbach said the AMT was enacted to make sure every taxpayer pays some income taxes. As for Kooyenga’s rip on Democrats, Erpenbach offered this thought: “It must be nice to be the smartest person in the Capitol.”

Steven Walters is a senior producer with the nonprofit WisconsinEye public affairs channel. Contact him at stevenscwalters@gmail.com 

3 thoughts on “The State of Politics: Budget Included Big Changes on Taxes”

  1. blurondo says:

    “It will most help filers with taxable incomes of between $200,000 and $500,000 according to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau.” Once again, the racism of the Tea Party is clearly displayed.

  2. AG says:

    Bluerondo, all your comment demonstrated is that you have no idea what the tea party is all about. Or did they slip a provision in there that made sure minorities still paid an AMT?

  3. Jake formerly of the LP says:

    Kooyenga is one smug SOB, isn’t he? Especially for a guy who’s been dead wrong about tax policy for the last 3 years (which is why we had budget deficits that needed to be closed in this budget, and why future budgets are also in the red), and for a guy who showed up bombed to the beejeezus the night the State Budget was passed this year.

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