Deals With The Devil

Here is your money at work in all it’s glory.

The following are some of the top tax sweeteners in the Senate passed Bailout Bill. Not all the provisions are per se outrageous, but collectively are intended to help Congressional leadership get final passage of the 2008 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act.

  1. Sec. 503. Exemption from excise tax for certain wooden arrows designed for use by children

Current law places an excise tax of 39 cents on the first sale by the manufacturer, producer, or importer of any shaft of a type used to produce certain types of arrows. This proposal would exempt from the excise tax any shaft consisting of all natural wood with no laminations or artificial means to enhance the spine of the shaft used in the manufacture of an arrow that measures 5/16 of an inch or less and is unsuited for use with a bow with a peak draw weight of 30 pounds or more. The proposal is effective for shafts first sold after the date of enactment. The estimated cost of the proposal is $2 million over ten years, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

The Oregon senators were the initial sponsors of the provisions. According to Bloomberg News, the provision would be worth $200,000 to Rose City Archery in Myrtle Point, Oregon.

  1. Sec. 317. Seven-year cost recovery period for motorsports racing track facility

Track owners want to be able write-off the cost of their facilities on their taxes over seven years – a depreciation timetable many of them have used for decades. But the IRS has wanted to stretch it to at least 15 years and has raised questions whether the increasingly popular tracks really belong in the same tax category as amusement parks.

Auto track owners are simply trying to get out of paying more taxes – which they’d have to do if they deducted less every year. These owners have gotten plenty of tax breaks over the years from states and localities eager to get speedways. The provision would be extended 2 years till the end of 2009 and would cost $100 million. The provision encompasses all facilities including grandstands, parking lots and concession stands.

  1. Sec. 308. Increase in limit on cover over of rum excise tax to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands
Extends until December 31, 2009 a rebate against excise taxes charged on rum imported from Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. A $13.50 per proof gallon excise tax is applied to distilled spirits imported to the U.S. Under this provision a $13.25 rebate is returned to PR and the VI, and is retroactive back to January 1, 2008. Permanent law sets the rebate at $10.50 per proof gallon, but the PR and VI provisions have generally been in place since the first Clinton Administration. The most recent extension of the $13.50 rebate expired January 1, 2008. Cost is $192 million.
Read the rest of them here. I realize I’m a day late and a dollar short but, you know, I work so I can send my tax dollars to Washington.
Excuse me while I go buy a bottle of that rum mentioned in Item 3, listen to some Robert Johnson and
wonder about deals made with the devil.
H/T Casey

5 Responses to “Deals With The Devil”

  1. Kate says:

    Psst. Ya got a hokey link. “Here”, I’m guessing was suppose to go someplace other than an odd “you don’t have permission” page. :)

    I don’t suppose you know where to find that goofy bill that’s NOT in .pdf, do ya? sigh…

  2. newscoma says:

    Thanks Kate, I fixed it.
    My bad. :)

  3. Kate says:

    Yer welcome. :)

    Ok, I might be as dumb as a box of rocks, but I don’t see how any of those things has much to do with whether or not Joe Public can afford his house. :?

  4. newscoma says:

    Exactly. :(
    Makes me kind of stabby and I’m pretty much nonviolent.

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