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Paycheck Anxiety Hits U.S. as Tax-Debate
Delay Risks Raising Withholding
Paychecks may shrink if Congress doesn't
move quickly to extend Bush tax cuts
Employers in the U.S. are starting to warn their workers to prepare
for slimmer paychecks if Congress fails to vote on an extension of Bush-era
tax cuts.
"I've been doing payroll for probably close to 30 years now, and never
have we seen something like this where it gets that down to the wire," said
Dennis Danilewicz, who manages payroll services for about 14,000 employees
at New York University's Langone Medical Center. "That's what's got a
lot of people nervous. All we can do is start preparing communications with
a couple of different scenarios."
Lawmakers won't start debating whether to extend the cuts, which expire
Dec. 31, until after the Nov. 2 elections. Because it takes weeks to
prepare withholding schedules, the Internal Revenue Service will probably
have to assume the cuts will expire and direct employers to increase
payroll deductions starting Jan. 1, experts say.
"We're kind of stuck between a rock and a hard place," said Ron Moser,
head of human resources for the school district of Kenmore-Town of Tonawanda,
New York, which pays about 1,900 teachers, custodians and aides each month.
In upstate New York, where winter heating costs are among the highest in the
country, many school employees earn between $20,000 and $40,000 a year, he
said, and losing $50 in a paycheck is "a significant dollar amount."
Employees Calls
"We're starting to get the calls" from employees asking what they
need to do for the next tax year, Moser said.
President Barack Obama and most Democrats want tax cuts extended for
middle-income earners and to end for the wealthiest Americans, the top
2 or 3 percent of earners. Republicans want tax cuts extended for everyone,
arguing that an increase makes little sense as the economy recovers from
the worst recession since the 1930s. Tax cuts went into effect in 2001
and 2003.
For Moser, the challenge of the moment is keeping people in the Buffalo
suburb, home to about 78,000 residents, calm about what will happen in
January. The area has several manufacturing employers -- including 3M
Co., General Motors Co. and Praxair Inc. -- and unemployment is 7.6 percent,
lower than the national rate of 9.6 percent. Still, many people are worried,
he said.
"The bulk of our employees don't understand" the coming tax debate
in Congress, Moser said. "When they see this type of thing happening they
go into panic mode. They don't follow what's going on."
June 2001 Rates
If Congress fails to act, income tax rates will revert to higher levels
dating from June 2001.
For a married couple with an income of $80,000, that would drain
an extra $221.48 in withholding from a semi-monthly paycheck, according
to calculations by the Tax Institute at H&R Block. Married individuals
earning $240,000 a year would lose an additional $557.78 to withholding
in a single semi-monthly paycheck. The Tax Institute at H&R Block
calculated federal tax rates for single-income earners and married taxpayers
without children.
Paychecks could shrink in January and into February, depending on how
long it takes Congress to act.
January could well be a time of "sticker shock" for salaried
employees and their employers, said Kathy Pickering, executive director
of the Tax Institute, an independent research division at Kansas City,
Missouri-based H&R Block Inc.
"If the laws get passed late in December, it's just necessarily going
to take one to three weeks to get those payroll tables updated and implemented
into the system," Pickering said.
Blow to Spending
Allowing the tax cuts to expire, even temporarily, would deal a blow
to disposable income and could curtail the consumer spending that accounts
for about 70 percent of the economy, said Alec Phillips, a Washington-based
economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
"The longer the expiration lasts, the more significant the impact will
be," he said.
Economists raised estimates for consumer spending in the third quarter
to 2 percent from 1.9 percent, according to the median forecast on a
Bloomberg News survey this month. Spending rose at a 2.2 percent pace
in the second quarter. The Commerce Department will release third-quarter
data on Oct. 29.
Making a withholding-rate change could take longer for small businesses
that don't outsource payroll services, experts said. If a business can't
react fast enough, employees could recoup any over-withholding by filing
a new W-4 tax form to temporarily lower their federal withholding rate.
Another option is to wait until 2012 when workers file their tax returns
for the previous year.
Taxpayer Strategy
Taxpayers could use the same strategies if Congress reinstates the tax
cuts next year and they need to recoup the extra withholding.
Jodi Parsons, manager of payroll and accounts payable at IFMC, a health
care management company based in West Des Moines, Iowa, said if the IRS
issues two sets of withholding tables, her two-person office could be
overwhelmed with processing changes to W-4 forms.
"We'd have to basically go back and hand calculate checks for all 800-900
employees to determine whether or not we need to deduct additional taxes from
them or refund taxes," Parsons said. "We'd like to see changes in
mid-November just to make sure we have time."
There are now six federal tax brackets, ranging from 10 percent to 35
percent. If Congress doesn't act, there will be five rates with the top
bracket reaching 39.6 percent.
Nov. 20 notice
Last year, the IRS alerted payroll departments on Nov. 20 about the 2010
tax tables, said Scott Mezistrano, senior manager of government relations
at the American Payroll Association in Washington. He said a delay in
guidance from the IRS could increase costs for some small businesses.
The Treasury Department last week issued a statement that it was "maintaining
flexibility" with regards to the release of the withholding tables
for 2011.
If the IRS issues tables in mid-November and then again later, businesses
will double their programming costs, Mezistrano said. A related concern,
he said, is if Congress makes a last-minute decision to extend the cuts
and companies aren't able to implement the change before January.
Business owners may face "tons of angry employees pounding at my
office door saying, 'What have you done to my paycheck?'" Mezistrano
said.
Source: Bloomberg Businessweek
October 28, 2010
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