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Old 09-05-2006, 12:29 PM   #1
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People who use tax loopholes when purchasing SUVs will reduce federal tax revenue by $2.6 billion next year,
according to a report from Congressman Ed Markey.

The Massachusetts Democrat wants to close the loophole with a bill
titled H.R. 5579, the No Special Subsidies for Gas Guzzlers Act.

Why should someone that buys an Audi that gets 20 mpg pay a tax when someone
else that buys a 13.9 mpg GMC Yukon Sierra pays no tax. Use the tax as carrot to buy more fuel efficient vehicles.

http://markey.house.gov/index.php?option=c...&Itemid=141

Write your Representative to Congress asking them to support this bill.
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Old 09-05-2006, 12:59 PM   #2
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I don't think much of Markey, and his reform pitch is leaving out a lot of stuff.

Gas guzzler taxes have never been applied to trucks and SUVs that are generally classed as trucks. The lack of a gas guzzler tax is not a real incentive to buy an SUV because the tax in built in to the price. Nobody really knows they are or are not paying it. The gas guzzler tax does not show up as a line up in the purchase that anyone notices.

I think the gas guzzler tax is stupid but if we are going to keep it, I have no problem with it applying to non-commercial truck buyers (commercial buyers should then be entitled to a rebate - though giving any money back to any truck buyer would probably chap the hide of Prius freaks)

In California all pickups are required to be registered as commercial vehicles, so those owners should be treated as commercial owners.

Nobody can depreciate any more than a vehicle is worth. Businesses can accelerate the depreciation of truck and heavy vehicles, but ove the life of the vehicle they can't write off any more than they would for similarly priced cars. They will pay taxes on any depreciation they recover when they dispose of the vehicle.

People driving caars with lousy mileage pay more in taxes at the pump. A guy driving a 15mpg SUV will pay 3 times as much as I do for gas and gas taxes. (Side note: How much of a windfall is your state seeing from sales taxes on high gas prices? If gas prices were cut in half over night, California would have to address its budget as the sales tax would drop by half as well)

This whole SUV tax break thing is big red herring. It only impacts businesses, and nothing will change in the long run for them anyway. The people buying Tahoes and Yukons to drive kids to soccer practice are not getting any tax breaks (indirectly, maybe, since gas guzzler taxes are built into the price of the other cars) compared to what you get on a hybrid.

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Old 09-05-2006, 01:21 PM   #3
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I believe gasoline taxes are paid by the gallon, and not based on the price. Does that mean we need guzzlers to keep the state's gas taxes high?
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Old 09-05-2006, 01:46 PM   #4
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Rick Auricchio @ Sep 5 2006, 10:21 AM) [snapback]314614[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
I believe gasoline taxes are paid by the gallon, and not based on the price.
[/b]
I think the issue is that, in California at least, we pay state sales tax on the price per gallon -- which already includes the fixed per-gallon gas tax. In other words, we pay tax on the tax.
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Old 09-05-2006, 08:11 PM   #5
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Hi Curtis,

I think you were confused by the title of the original post. The issue is not about Gas Guzzler taxes - taxing a vehicle that uses excessive gas for single-person transportation, but about a law gives a tax deduction for those with their own buisness to buy such large vehicles. Whether there is a requirement of the buisness to need such a vehicle or not. Many self-employed professionals have used this tax break to buy large SUV's (The vehicle is required to be heavier than 6000 pounds for the tax break to kick in) for the primary purpose of driving to the office and back, by themselves.


Oh, I see you commented about the SUV tax break later on in your post. Any self-employed persion is a "buisness". Many of these guys are contractors, surveyors and many other out-on-the-road working people. So, the tax break makes sense for them. But the richest self employed people are typically professionals (doctors, lawyers, accoutants), with no need for a large vehicle to accomplish their work duties. This is the loop hole that is being exploited. You know a $50K deduction and the probable drop in tax bracket for one of these guys buys allot of Gas! So, from their point of veiw, Why Not!? And it all pushes up our cost of living. Markey is right on target on with this!


SUV's should be taken off the dededuction list, as they are not useful as a working vehicle. The business should be required to show-cause why such a vehicle is needed for the day-to-day functioning of the operations which generate income, on which taxes will be paid. Most contractors will easily be able to meet this requirement as their vehicle is used to store, and perform required transport of operationally required equipment that wieghs more than 500 pounds, daily, and/or has a bulk not accomadated by a car. Vehicles with rear passenger seats should be excluded.



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Old 09-06-2006, 03:24 AM   #6
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(donee @ Sep 5 2006, 05:11 PM) [snapback]314847[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
The business should be required to show-cause why such a vehicle is needed for the day-to-day functioning of the operations which generate income, on which taxes will be paid. Most contractors will easily be able to meet this requirement as their vehicle is used to store, and perform required transport of operationally required equipment that wieghs more than 500 pounds, daily, and/or has a bulk not accomadated by a car. Vehicles with rear passenger seats should be excluded.
[/b]
Me likie your ideas!!
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Old 09-06-2006, 02:24 PM   #7
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Rick Auricchio @ Sep 5 2006, 12:21 PM) [snapback]314614[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
I believe gasoline taxes are paid by the gallon, and not based on the price. Does that mean we need guzzlers to keep the state's gas taxes high?
[/b]

It's both. State and federal gas taxes are a fixed amount added to each gallon. California adds sales tax, as much as 8.75% in some locations, to the price of each gallon.
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Old 09-06-2006, 03:10 PM   #8
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(donee @ Sep 5 2006, 07:11 PM) [snapback]314847[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
Hi Curtis,

I think you were confused by the title of the original post. The issue is not about Gas Guzzler taxes - taxing a vehicle that uses excessive gas for single-person transportation, but about a law gives a tax deduction for those with their own buisness to buy such large vehicles...[/b]
Markey's press release talks about both taxes. He complains that the gas guzzler tax is not imposed on SUV and light trucks that get worse mileage than some cars which pay the tax. He gave the Audi - Jeep example. The Audi pays $1300 in gas guzzler taxes, but the Jeep, which gets worse mileage, pays none.

We need to remember the very few people are concerned about the gas guzzler tax (which has been around for a couple of decades) because they don't see it. It's built into the purchase price of the cars to which is applies.

Quote:

... Whether there is a requirement of the buisness to need such a vehicle or not. Many self-employed professionals have used this tax break to buy large SUV's (The vehicle is required to be heavier than 6000 pounds for the tax break to kick in) for the primary purpose of driving to the office and back, by themselves.


Oh, I see you commented about the SUV tax break later on in your post. Any self-employed persion is a "buisness". Many of these guys are contractors, surveyors and many other out-on-the-road working people. So, the tax break makes sense for them. But the richest self employed people are typically professionals (doctors, lawyers, accoutants), with no need for a large vehicle to accomplish their work duties. This is the loop hole that is being exploited. You know a $50K deduction and the probable drop in tax bracket for one of these guys buys allot of Gas! So, from their point of veiw, Why Not!? And it all pushes up our cost of living. Markey is right on target on with this!

SUV's should be taken off the dededuction list, as they are not useful as a working vehicle. The business should be required to show-cause why such a vehicle is needed for the day-to-day functioning of the operations which generate income, on which taxes will be paid. Most contractors will easily be able to meet this requirement as their vehicle is used to store, and perform required transport of operationally required equipment that wieghs more than 500 pounds, daily, and/or has a bulk not accomadated by a car. Vehicles with rear passenger seats should be excluded.
[/b]
I say Markey is blowing smoke up your ass. You can't deduct any more of the purchase price on truck or SUV than you can on a regular car. This so-called "loophole" has to do with how fast you deduct the depreciation.

A doctor or other business person cannot write off the full purchase price of a vehicle in one tax year. It is a capital expenditure that you write off in chunks over a period of years. On a regular car the schedule might be seven years. The accelerated schedule available to a truck or SUV might be three years. No difference in the end.

Let's say your doctor buys a $50K SUV and writes off the full amount in three years. In year four he sells it (or otherwise disposes of it) for $25K. He has told the IRS that the vehicle was fully depreciated under an accellerated schedule and took that full amount over the three years as dedcutions. He recouperated $25K of that depreciation... and guess what? He'll owe taxes on it. Accellerated depreciation gives him some more short term tax relief, but down the road it will all add up the same way regardless of what kind of car he writing off.

This is why it's a red herring. The people like Markey that are cackling about this will talk about "how much this cost the taxpayers last year" or "how much it will cost the tax payers next year." They will never tell how much your doctor's SUV costs the taxpayer over several years - because it would be the same as if he had bought any other $50K car.

And you should be careful about statement like "SUV's should be taken off the dededuction list, as they are not useful as a working vehicle." That is simply not true. The people you mentioned - contractors, surveyors, etc. can use SUVs in much the same way as pickups. SUVs offer flexibilities that pickups don't. I spent 15 years in telecommunications maintaining mountaintop radio facilities. My primary vehicle was a 3/4 ton Suburban. I carried almost $200K of test equipment and spare parts in the back of it. I also used to tow a 6,000 lbs. emergency mobile communications system and generators. Some of our people drove Explorers because they didn't need the capacity I had, but they needed the off road capability to do their jobs.

Perhaps your podiatrist doesn't need a Hummer for work, but if he can write off a vehicle, I really don't care what he chooses to drive.

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Old 09-06-2006, 08:38 PM   #9
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2 things
1-be careful of complaining about taking advantage of loopholes or incentives. How many Prius drivers would have bought a prius without the $3150 tax credit. I probably would have bought one any way. Some tax "incentives" we like, some we don't. I'm sure that there are people out there complaining about subsidizing our Prius purchases with their tax money.

2-There has been some local (SFO bay area) and state (CA) government people floating the idea of having everybody register their mileage and pay a per mile tax. Some people think that those of us with high MPG cars are not paying our fair share.
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Old 09-07-2006, 12:07 AM   #10
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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Stan57 @ Sep 6 2006, 05:38 PM) [snapback]315511[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
2 things
1-be careful of complaining about taking advantage of loopholes or incentives. How many Prius drivers would have bought a prius without the $3150 tax credit. I probably would have bought one any way. Some tax "incentives" we like, some we don't. I'm sure that there are people out there complaining about subsidizing our Prius purchases with their tax money.

2-There has been some local (SFO bay area) and state (CA) government people floating the idea of having everybody register their mileage and pay a per mile tax. Some people think that those of us with high MPG cars are not paying our fair share.
[/b]
I've heard about those mileage-tax proposals! If you're for higher taxes, it makes sense. I'd rather keep the incentives for higher mileage and cleaner burning cars (which gas taxes help encourage).

I actually delayed buying my Prius until after Jan. 1 ... was on a waiting list from August of 2005 ... to take advantage of the tax credit. So even though I would have bought a Prius anyway, I did take the financial bait to wait until the credit was available.
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