All eyes are on the election, the outcome of which will likely determine the future of tax policy. The stakes are exceptionally high as the United States is facing its largest tax cliff in decades. With that in mind, Baker Tilly has created a series of webpages providing details and insights on the 2024 election and what it could mean for taxpayers:
The balance of power heading into the 119th Congress will affect any potential tax reform, which will have financial implications for almost all U.S. taxpayers. Baker Tilly will continue to provide insights through the election and ultimate legislative resolution.
As expected, Congress wasn’t able to pass any of the 12 appropriations bills needed to fund the federal government before the beginning of the 2025 fiscal year (FY25), which began on Oct. 1, 2024. After contentious debate about a six-month continuing resolution (CR), lawmakers ultimately passed a “clean” three-month CR that will keep the government funded at FY24 levels through Dec. 20, 2024. This marks the 28th year in a row that Congress has used a CR to avoid a government shutdown.
Congress won’t convene again until Nov. 12, after the general election, for a lame duck session. Lawmakers will face two must-pass legislations – FY25 government funding and the annual defense bill (the National Defense Authorization Act or NDAA).
Republicans and Democrats differ vastly on FY25 topline spending figures. Most democrats support adhering to the funding levels agreed to in the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, negotiated by President Biden and then-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). Meanwhile, some more conservative Republicans believe non-defense spending should be significantly lower. Current Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) is also adamant Congress will not approve a December omnibus, a single bill that combines all twelve appropriations bills, which could complicate negotiations and result in another CR that extends funding into the next Congress.
Lawmakers will also have the opportunity to pass a year-end tax extenders bill in the lame duck session, though the prevailing sentiment is that a tax legislation is unlikely. The most pressing issues include the trio of business tax provisions that were included in the bipartisan tax bill that recently failed to advance in the Senate.
Congress will also need to address the federal debt ceiling in the lame duck session. The federal debt ceiling is “the total amount of money that the United States government is authorized to borrow to meet its existing legal obligations.” The limitation doesn’t authorize new spending, as appropriations bills and continuing resolutions do, it simply allows the U.S. to incur debt on spending commitments authorized by other legislation. The federal debt limit is set by Congress.
Authorizing the United States to take on additional debt to meet its obligations has become a political bargaining chip over the last couple decades. The Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 included a debt limit suspension through Jan. 1, 2025. A failure to extend the suspension or increase the debt ceiling could have catastrophic consequences for the domestic and global economies.
The IRS announced new milestones since we last discussed enforcement activity in our July Policy Pulse. To date the IRS has collected:
The IRS received $80 billion in additional funding in the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), $20 billion of which was clawed back via a bipartisan agreement last year. The bulk of the IRA funding was earmarked for enforcement efforts; the IRS has started a campaign to restore “fairness in tax compliance by shifting more attention onto high-income earners, partnerships, large corporations and promoters abusing the nation’s tax laws.”
As we reported in the May Policy Pulse, the IRS has outlined their goals and progress in their 2024 IRA Strategic Operating Plan and supplement.
Annual funding of the IRS has become a contentious debate. Democrats would like to continue funding the IRS at current levels and leave the remaining $60 billion of IRS funding in place. Some Republicans would prefer to claw back more IRS supplemental funding in addition to cutting annual appropriations, particularly targeting the money available for enforcement.
The Senate and House have taken vastly different approaches for FY25 IRS funding:
The majority of the IRS budget comes from annual appropriations. Lawmakers will need to address this as part of the FY25 government funding debate in the lame duck session.
This summer, the IRS began moving on long-stalled Employee Retention Credit (ERC) claims. Taxpayers with outstanding ERC claims have begun to receive payments or denial letters, depending on the ultimate IRS determination on the validity of the claim. Businesses that received a Form 105-C denying or disallowing an ERC claim now have two years from the date of the letter to request an appeal.
In addition to beginning the approval process for outstanding claims there have been several other ERC developments:
If you have questions, please reach out to your Baker Tilly advisor to discuss the impact of our tax policy updates.