Wednesday, January 16, 2013

0 Fiscal Cliff and Housing

fiscal cliff, meme, funny, housing
It seems that for now we have avoided the fiscal cliff which was supposed to take effect in 2013. It is considered as an economically damaging set of tax increases and spending reductions which is good news for the housing industry, but for how long? The enactment of H.R. 8 or the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 has the following provisions; it has increased income tax, increase in capital gain and dividend rates, exemption and deduction phase-out for all individuals with high-income.It has made permanent the alternative minimum tax relief and has increased the federal estate, gift and generation-skipping tax.

There will also be an extension of certain tax breaks but for a limited time which is generally two years for various business credits, exemptions including new markets tax credit, work opportunity tax credit, and the exclusion of gain on the disposition of certain small business stock. Well, this extension from the Tax breaks are good for home buyers since it will help lessen the number of foreclosure and will help borrowers whose mortgage is upside down to stay in their homes. You may recall, that a law was signed in 2007 stating that debt relief modifications, foreclosures and homes in short sale were no longer taxable and it was supposed to end in 2012. Now, if these tax breaks were not extended, homeowners would not agree in putting their homes in short sale because they would then be facing the tax bill and they would also not agree to the principal reduction loan modification which is way more successful than any other modifications because it leaves the principal as is. This latest development in legislation would do “mostly” good for the people. It somehow prevented the massive tax hikes and deep government spending cuts which could trigger the country to go into recession again. About ninety percent of the new tax revenue which will be collected for the year will come from families who are earning more than 1 million dollar annually. Meaning, only 1 percent of the population will be affected.
However, the negative part of the deal would be; the act did not extend the 2% reduction in Social Security portion of the FICA tax collected from wages, so as a result, a worker who earns a total of $113,000 per Social Security ceiling for 2013 will see an increase in taxes from his earnings of $2,274 this year. If an individual’s income is above $250,000 then expect the tax rate on stock dividends to exceed the current 15% level. Explained as; each extra dollar earned as investment income which includes dividends and long-term capital gains are now subject to the 15% rate plus a 3.8% surcharge under the Affordable Care Act or the “Obama Care” making now a total levy of 18.8% on your income.

In two weeks time the Congress will meet again to raise the debt ceiling. Well, whatever the outcome would be, ordinary citizens are being called to act and let their voices be heard by calling their representatives and let them hear your thoughts on this before it takes effect on March 1, 2013.

About the Author:
Georges Kfoury is the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Leaderscorp Financial Inc. headquartered in Rancho Cucamonga, CA, a leading provider of mortgage financing dedicated towards providing affordable home loans. He founded the company way back 2003 from a ground level, without having the mortgage background. In spite of this, he was able to immediately take the company a level of generating annual income ranging from 8 to 10 million dollars.



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