Small businesses that took PPP aid may face a tax problem

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The bipartisan leadership of the Senate Finance Committee, including Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, asked the IRS to reconsider its position. (Photo by Zach Gibson/Getty Images)Getty Images

A recent IRS ruling tying up a loose end in the 2020 economic-relief law could force many small businesses to pay taxes on government aid meant to help through the pandemic.

The agency on Nov. 18 said the businesses cannot deduct expenses such as payroll and rent, paid for with money from the Paycheck Protection Program of the CARES Act. Such deductions are common when those expenses are paid for with revenue from running a business.

The ruling hardened a divide between the Trump administration and the main tax writers in Congress, who have sought since the corona­virus outbreak produced an economic slowdown to ensure that aid to businesses not be taxed.

Leaders of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden, asked the IRS and Treasury to reconsider their position. They said Congress may act when it reconvenes in December.

“Since the CARES Act, we’ve stressed that our intent was for small businesses receiving Paycheck Protection Program loans to receive the benefit of their deductions for ordinary and necessary business expenses,” the senators said in a statement.

The IRS decision got lost in the swirl of news out of Washington last week, including that the Treasury Department moved to restrict the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin opposed PPP-related deductions for businesses in negotiations with Congress earlier this year.

As word sank in last week, accountants and bankers called small-business owners to warn them to prepare for an increased tax bill. A trade association of accountants urged business owners to reach out to members of Congress for legislative relief.

To speed the distribution of $525 billion in aid to small businesses this spring and summer, the CARES Act directed the Small Business Administration to move funds through the nation’s banks in the form of loans that would be forgiven if a business showed it used the money to keep people employed. The last loans were distributed in August.

The tax confusion for PPP recipients arose because the tax code normally disallows deductions associated with tax-free income. The IRS and Treasury Department underscored that principle last week by saying, “Since businesses are not taxed on the proceeds of a forgiven PPP loan, the expenses are not deductible.”

The issue is complicated by the timing of when the loan is forgiven, turning it into a tax-free grant. Many businesses have not yet asked the government for loan forgiveness.

The IRS views the PPP aid as a wash for businesses, since tax-free income would go in and nondeductible expenses go out of a tax calculation.

But from a business owner’s perspective, the PPP money replaced lost revenue but without the benefit of being able to subtract payroll and other costs to calculate taxable income, creating greater tax exposure as a result.

“The word from Congress at the time was this is going to be a forgivable loan and it says right in the CARES Act that it’s not income,” said Mike Crabtree, partner at Boulay, an accounting firm with offices in Eden Prairie and Minneapolis.

“People were thinking it’s like a government grant, essentially a shot in the arm to help them through this rough time,” he said. “But as they decided to create the disallowance of the expenses, then it might not be helping keep these businesses afloat. It was called the Paycheck Protection Program, with the idea that the money would go to employees and keep them off the unemployment line. That’s generally what happened. As far as the health of the business itself, this isn’t really doing as much.”

In a worst-case situation, business owners who sought the aid, kept people employed for awhile but ultimately couldn’t keep their business alive would face a tax bill for taking government assistance.

In their statement, Grassley and Wyden said the ruling by the IRS and Treasury “increases the tax burden on small businesses by accelerating their tax liability, all at a time when many businesses continue to struggle and some are again beginning to close. Small businesses need help maintaining their cash flow, not more strains on it.”

To the U.S. Treasury and IRS, tens of billions of dollars are on the line. If the ruling stands, the government could recover money from business taxpayers. If Congress changes the law and President Donald Trump agrees before leaving office, the government could end up, in many cases, making tax refunds to small businesses that received the PPP aid.

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