March 22, 2010
Dear Client:
We are writing
to give you an overview of two key tax changes affecting business in the
recently enacted Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment (HIRE) Act. Please
call our offices for details of how the new changes may affect your specific
business.
Payroll
tax holiday and up-to-$1,000 credit for employers who hire unemployed workers. To help stimulate the
hiring of workers by the private sector, the new law exempts any private-sector
employer that hires a worker who had been unemployed for at least 60 days from
having to pay the employer's 6.2% share of the Social Security payroll tax on
that employee for the remainder of 2010. A company could save a maximum of
$6,621 if it hired an unemployed worker and paid that worker at least
$106,800—the maximum amount of wages subject to Social Security taxes—by the
end of the year. As an additional incentive, for any qualifying worker hired
under this initiative that the employer keeps on payroll for a continuous 52
weeks, the employer is eligible for an additional non-refundable tax credit of
up to $1,000 after the 52-week threshold is reached, to be taken on their 2011
tax return. In order to be eligible, the employee's pay in the second 26-week
period must be at least 80% of the pay in the first 26-week period.
Workers hired
after the date of introduction of the legislation (Feb. 3, 2010) are eligible
for the payroll tax forgiveness and the retention bonus, but only wages paid
after March 18 receive the exemption for payroll taxes. Some additional
features of the new hiring incentive include:
Extension
of enhanced small business expensing. The new law gives a one-year lease on
life to enhanced expensing rules, which allow qualifying businesses the option
to currently deduct the cost of business machinery and equipment, instead of
recovering it via depreciation over a number of years. For tax years beginning
in 2010, the maximum amount that a business may expense is $250,000, and the
expensing election begins to phase out when a business buys more than $800,000
of expensing-eligible assets. These dollar limits are the same as those that
were in effect for 2008 and 2009. Had the HIRE Recovery Act not been passed and
signed into law, these dollar limits would have dropped this year to $134,000
and $530,000 respectively.
We hope this
information is helpful. If you would like more details about these provisions
or any other aspect of the new law, please do not hesitate to call.
Very truly yours,
Gosling & Company, P.C.
Certified Public Accountants