I just heard a commercial on the radio selling Cadillac Escalades..."if you
are a business owner and you buy before the end of the year the IRS will
allow you to write off $32,000..." was the gist.  I was appalled!

Played on the leading talk radio @ 5:00 PM in the Phoenix market.

Disgusting.

-----Original Message-----
From: Keith Addison [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, December 21, 2002 12:37 PM
To: biofuel@yahoogroups.com
Cc: biofuels-biz@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [biofuel] SUV, truck owners get a big tax break


http://www.detnews.com/2002/autosinsider/0212/18/c01-38875.htm
- 12/18/02
Wednesday, December 18, 2002

David Coates / The Detroit News

Karl Wizinsky, a health care consultant in Novi, was able to write
off $32,000 of the $47,000 purchase price of a Ford Excursion as a
business expense. It's perfectly legal, and accountants and auto
dealers are starting to catch on.

SUV, truck owners get a big tax break

Loophole allows hefty write-off for vehicles

By Jeff Plungis / Detroit News Washington Bureau

Eligible vehicles

Here are the 38 light truck models that qualify for an extra $24,000
accelerated depreciation tax break:
  BMW X5
  Cadillac Escalade
  Chevy Astro
  Chevy Avalanche
  Chevy Express
  Chevy Silverado
  Chevy Suburban
  Chevy Tahoe
  Dodge Durango
  Dodge Ram Van
  Dodge Ram Maxi Van
  Dodge Ram Wagon
  Dodge Ram 1500
  Dodge Ram 2500
  Dodge Ram 3500
  Ford Excursion
  Ford Expedition
  Ford Econoline E-150
  Ford Econoline E-250
  Ford Econoline E-350
  Ford F-150
  Ford F-250
  Ford F-350
  GMC Yukon
  GMC Safari
  GMC Savana
  GMC Sierra
  GMC Sierra Denali
  Land Rover Discovery
  Land Rover Range Rover
  Lincoln Blackwood
  Lincoln Navigator
  Mercedes ML 320
  Mercedes ML 500
  Mercedes ML55 AMG
  Toyota Land Cruiser
  Toyota Sequoia
  Toyota Tundra

Comment on this story
Send this story to a friend
Get Home Delivery

WASHINGTON -- Karl Wizinsky wasn't thinking about buying a new
vehicle, and certainly not a big SUV. So why is there a brand-new
$47,000 Ford Excursion sitting in his driveway?

He was able to write off $32,000 of the purchase price as a business
expense.

"We really did it because it was a pretty hefty deduction," said
Wizinsky, a health care consultant in Novi.

At the same time the tax code sanctions $30,000 write-offs for SUVs,
prospective purchasers of a fuel-efficient hybrid vehicles qualify
for a relatively small $4,000 tax credit.

A deal to extend similar tax credits to other environmentally
friendly vehicles remains stalled in Congress.

It's all legal, and accountants and auto dealers are beginning to catch on.

"If it can save the consumer money, it's most likely that the dealer
is going to know about it," said Andrew Beck, spokesman for the
National Automobile Dealers Association. So far, there is no
indication anyone in Congress wants to close the loophole. In fact,
even higher depreciation tax breaks are on the table as part of the
next round of tax cuts President Bush is planning.

The SUV tax break is becoming a staple of advice in the accounting
world, as small business owners such as Wizinsky are advised on ways
to reduce end-of-the-year tax bills.

The size of the tax break has been growing under a schedule that
became law in 1996. That's when Congress changed tax law to encourage
business investment.

The scale of the tax break surprises accountants and tax experts, who
feel bound to recommend SUVs and other light trucks to small-business
clients.

"As I understood it, the reason (for the tax break) is to encourage
business investment. That's what happened in my case," Wizinsky said.

At the same time, the tax break seems to contradict other national
goals, such as improving vehicle fuel efficiency. A more economical
fleet would aid two important national goals: reducing U.S.
dependence on foreign oil and cutting greenhouse gasses.

The total cost of the loophole hasn't been calculated by the
government, but Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan Washington
watchdog group, estimates the SUV tax loophole could cost taxpayers
between $840 million and $987 million for every 100,000 vehicles sold
to businesses.

Aileen Roder, the group's program director, questioned whether there
is a national need to subsidize sales of the largest light trucks --
given Americans are buying SUVs in record numbers.

"This is one of the most lucrative breaks in the tax code," Roder
said. "We're making it a fiscal no-brainer for businesses to buy
giant SUVs."

To get an idea of the scale of the SUV tax break, a credit aimed at
making it easier for small businesses to comply with the Americans
with Disabilities Act costs $525 million per 100,000 uses.

A tax credit to reimburse teachers for classroom supplies annually
costs the treasury $250 million per 100,000 uses.

And a provision allowing taxpayers to put up to $3,000 of tax-free
earnings per year in private retirement accounts costs about $90
million per 100,000 taxpayers, according to Taxpayers for Common
Sense.

There are long-standing limits on deductions to prevent taxpayers
from subsidizing luxury-car purchases. But the limits do not apply to
38 light trucks that weigh 6,000 pounds or more, including the
Cadillac Escalade, Dodge Durango, Excursion and Lincoln Navigator.

"We recognized it immediately and started informing people about how
to use it," said James Jenkins, an accountant in Southfield. "It's
just fabulous. My clients have been drooling."

Jenkins said five clients have used the loophole so far and five more
are considering it. Jenkins even considered using the break,
test-driving several SUVs.

"It makes you think very hard about it," Jenkins said. "But it was a
30 percent larger vehicle than I wanted."

Here's how the SUV tax break works:

Suppose a business owner wants to purchase a $45,000 luxury SUV for
use in his business. He or she could write off $24,000 of the cost
under section 179 of the tax code as accelerated depreciation. Then
the buyer could write off additional depreciation of the remaining
$21,000 under a five-year schedule -- 20 percent, or $4,200, in the
first year.

That's a total $28,200 tax write-off.

The balance of the vehicle could be written off over the next five
years. A more expensive large vehicle, like a Mercedes E-class SUV, a
Range Rover or a BMW X5, would qualify for an even greater tax break.

The break for trucks got bigger this year under a schedule Congress
adopted in 1996 when businesses could claim $17,500 in accelerated
depreciation on equipment.

That lump sum increased to $20,000 last year. It went up to $24,000
this year. Next year and thereafter the deduction will be $25,000.

In 1996, Congress estimated the five-year cost of the tax break --
for all business equipment -- to be $1.6 billion. But luxury SUVs had
barely cracked the market at that time.

IRS spokesman Bruce Friedland said the agency does not keep data on
how much the tax break has cost. According to figures supplied by
Autodata, there were 3.8 million of the 6,000-pound light truck
models sold in 2001.

There are no estimates for how many of the vehicles that qualify were
sold to businesses or how many businesses that bought vehicles took
advantage of the deduction.

The code is not as generous for luxury cars.

A business owner wanting to purchase a Lincoln Town Car would have to
live with a $7,660 deduction, one-fourth what he might save by buying
a Lincoln Navigator. It would take more than 15 years to recoup the
entire cost of the car.

After Sept. 10, 2004, the luxury-car write-off will revert to $3,060.

Tax experts say the light-truck tax loophole was originally targeted
for farmers, so their working pickup trucks would not be treated, for
tax purposes, like luxury cars.

There was no mention of the need to stimulate the luxury truck market
in the 1996 tax debate.

The House of Representatives attempted to make the SUV tax break even
more generous as Congress debated an economic stimulus package in
March.

Under the House plan, the cap for accelerated depreciation would have
risen from $24,000 to $35,000. That effort died in negotiations with
the Senate.

You can reach Jeff Plungis at (202) 662-7378 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://archive.nnytech.net/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/




Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Biofuels list archives:
http://archive.nnytech.net/

Please do NOT send Unsubscribe messages to the list address.
To unsubscribe, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 


Reply via email to