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Governor Baker’s nearly $700 million tax relief bill clears Committee mostly intact
By Michael P. Norton
The Legislature’s Revenue Committee advanced a $600 million tax relief package on Friday, but the panel’s House chairman said the measure remains a work in progress.
The committee voted 17-0, according to House chairman Rep. Mark Cusack, to advance a redraft of Gov. Charlie Baker’s tax relief plan that does not feature Baker’s call for a cut in the short-term capital gains rate. Committee members were not interested in that piece of the governor’s bill, Cusack said.
“The rest of the bill is intact,” Cusack said.
Baker in January filed a nearly $700 million package proposing tax breaks for renters, seniors, parents and low-income workers. He also recommended changes to the way Massachusetts handles estate and capital gains taxes.
The bill will be further developed by the House Ways and Means Committee, Cusack said, advising against viewing the Revenue Committee bill as the House’s plan.
“This is just moving it in the process,” said Cusack (D-Braintree), whose panel faced a Friday deadline to make a recommendation on the bill.
As for the rest of the measures in Baker’s bill, Cusack said, “These are the areas that we had some consensus on, some interest in.”
Senate President Karen Spilka said last month that a tax relief package may include changes to the earned income tax credit and the estate tax.
Cusack on Friday mentioned the earned income tax credit as an area of potential interest among those studying tax relief, and EITC bills were among a menu of relief proposals that were “attached” to the redraft of the governor’s bill and released from the Revenue Committee on Friday.
The committee voted on the governor’s bills (H 4361 Redraft | H 4362 Redraft) and others after issuing an electronic poll on Thursday night, with the voting closing at 1 p.m. Friday.
“The cost of just about everything is going up, and these tax breaks would help offset some of those costs for families,” Baker said when he rolled out his plan in January. “From a fiscal point of view, Massachusetts is in a very strong financial position and able to offer this tax relief while continuing to make big investments in our people, our schools and our communities.”
Baker has described the 12 percent tax on short-term capital gains as “markedly uncompetitive compared to the rest of the country” and says a 5 percent rate would treat that money the same as other income and align Massachusetts with other states. In 2019, more than 150,000 filers paid the tax, more than 61,000 of whom had incomes below $112,000, according to the governor’s budget.
Additionally, Baker wants to double tax credits for dependents and child care, double the allowable maximum for the senior circuit breaker property tax credit, and increase the cap on deductions for rent payments from $3,000 to $5,000.
The Republican governor is also looking to raise the income level at which people are required to file taxes, a move the Executive Office of Administration of Finance says would affect about 234,000 low-income taxpayers and cost the state $41 million on an annualized basis. Currently, Massachusetts residents must file an income tax return if they earn $8,000 as a single filer, $14,400 as a head of household, or $16,400 as joint filers. His plan would raise the no-tax threshold to align with the federal level, bringing it to $12,400 for single filers, $18,650 for heads of households, and $24,800 for joint filers.
A bipartisan consensus around making changes to the estate tax has been emerging, although the exact approach remains to be seen. The estate tax is a transfer tax on the value of a decedent’s estate before distribution to any beneficiary.
Under Baker’s plan, the threshold at which the estate tax kicks in would double to $2 million. While the current tax applies to the full value of estates over $1 million, Baker’s bill (H 4361) would tax only the amount above $2 million.
Some have argued for estate tax changes to reflect the rise in real estate values and help families that are house-rich and cash-poor, but the Massachusetts Budget and Policy Center has also warned against estate tax law changes that could deliver big tax relief to larger estates.
A Baker spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on Friday afternoon.
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