You don’t know any small, family businesses do you? If you did and the husband and wife filed jointly, they are considered rich by you and BHO. These small businesses often operate at a loss for a number of years and then have years of profits over $250,000. This plan kills them.
Also, most new small businesses are S - Corps … as such they are considered pass through entities … they don;t actually pay Corporate Income Taxes but the company profits are added into the individual taxpayer’s income - even when the money remains in the business and never ‘passes’ into the individuals private accounts …
I have shown a profit in some years [December 31st] … that money never left the company … and had to borrow money in April to pay income taxes on the “profit” that was used to pay salaries for my employees and pay company bills in January - March …
For the gentlman who thinks deductability is not the primary factor in giving … yes you are correct … my husband and I usually average about 15 - 20 % - of our gross in charitable giving annually - We have rarely made over 100K … only in a couple of years have we crossed that mark …and currently I am on unemployment for the 1st time in 32 years! … I have had to lay off all of my employees - things are rough …
We are able to give more then we might because of the deductability … every dollar we are not sending to Uncle Sam we can spend where we feel it will do the most good. So the person who makes $100,000 and who donates $10,000 [10%] could increase his donation by an additional $2,000 if they were in a 20% tax bracket because of the ability to reduce the income by the amount of their donation …
Without making this too complex [like our tax system] …
With an Income of $100,000 and a non-deductable $10,000 donation and with a 20 % tax = $20,000
you have $100,000 - $10,000 - $20,000 leaving $70,000 for the individual …
With an Income of $100,000 less $10,000 deductable donation] the income becomes $90,000 with a 20 % tax = $18,000
you have $100,000 - 10,000 - 18,000 leaving $72,000 for the individual …
and thus we could have …
With an Income of $100,000 less $12,000 donation] the income becomes $88,000 with a 20 % tax = $17,600
So you have $100,000 - 12,000 - 17,600 leaving $70,400 for the individual …
I am sure when you look at this example you can see how charities benefit from the tax policy … and the governemnt long ago realized the societal good that comes from charitable giving …