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Decoder Wire

Enjoy tax day 2012, next year could be 'Taxageddon'

Sure, this tax day won't be fun, but a raft of tax cuts are set to expire this year, and with Congress preoccupied by Election 2012, Americans face the prospect of a much bigger tax bill in 2013.

By Staff writer / April 17, 2012

Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R) of Utah (c.), seen here in a file photo, feels your pain on tax day.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP/File

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WASHINGTON

Think tax day 2012 is bad? Just wait – tax day 2013 could be a real humdinger.

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Not because of the taxes you’ll be doing late into the night of Sunday, April 14, 2013. But because the tax situation for the next year may be a serious, unbridled mess.

Decoder certainly isn’t minimizing this year’s tax pain – what, the government can hire clowns and mind readers and here I am picking up the tab?

“That’s what’s making writing that check for taxpayers today so difficult and so painful,” said Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R) of Utah on a call with reporters. “When they see the waste, fraud and abuse that happens at the GSA and other parts of government it’s just so frustrating to the American people. And it should be.”

But frustrating won’t begin to describe taxpayer pain if almost half a trillion in tax hikes come into being on Jan. 1, 2013. Looming on the horizon are a raft of tax proposals that could blow up in taxpayers faces so immensely that Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue wrote sardonically in a Tuesday op-ed that “Tax Day is upon us – and you should enjoy it. Why? As painful as it may be to write this year’s check to Uncle Sam, it could be the smallest check you’ll write for years to come.”

What’s coming due at year’s end? According to one analysis by a scholar at the conservative Heritage Foundation, nearly $500 billion in tax increases including the following:

  • $165 billion from the expiration of the Bush tax cuts.
  • $124 billion from the expiration of the Social Security payroll tax cut.
  • $118 billion from a failure to patch the Alternative Minimum Tax
  • Roughly $60 billion from various tax cuts expiring – including stimulus cuts, estate tax cuts, and favorable treatment for businesses that make big purchases.
  • $20 billion from tax increases from President Obama’s health-care reform law.

Holy smokes, right? No wonder members of Congress nearly always list heading off what Heritage calls “Taxageddon” as a principal concern. Add to that the fact that Congress has to deal with the budget-slashing sequester and the need to again raise the debt ceiling and December could be harrowing, indeed. 

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