
Op-ed: There’s a potential tax increase coming.
Here’s what you need to know
By: Ivory Johnson, CFP, ChFC – April 2024
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Ivory Johnson, CFP®, ChFC, is the founder of Delancey Wealth Management, LLC (www.delanceywealth.com). Mr. Johnson has a B.S. in finance from Penn State University, has been certified by the Digital Asset Council for Financial Professionals, and is a member of the CNBC Financial Advisor Council.
Statements are opinions and not guarantees. Investments mentioned have potential risks and uncertainties.
KEY POINTS
- It is common folklore, a fairy tale of sorts, that middle-class Americans received perpetual relief in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
- If a divided Congress fails to make amendments, the old tax brackets will return after years of wage growth — which means more of your income may hit the older and more onerous brackets sooner.
- It is currently unclear if other provisions cut in the TCJA will be returned to taxpayers.
It is common folklore, a fairy tale of sorts, that middle-class
It is common folklore, a fairy tale of sorts, that middle-class Americans received perpetual relief in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.
First, property taxes generate 32% of state and local income, and U.S. median single-family home property taxes have risen by more than 25% since 2019. There are also under-the-radar excise taxes imposed on the sale of things like fuel, airline tickets, tires, tobacco and other goods and services that can mitigate some of the savings from many of the federal tax cuts that are temporary and may disappear after 2025.
The devil is usually in the details, and by all accounts he’s been busy
The provision that reduced the corporate tax rates to 21% is permanent, but the qualified business income deduction enjoyed by many small businesses, as well as the increased standard deduction and favorable tax brackets, will expire unless Congress extends these deliverables.