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Nonprofits are the unintended victims of the new tax bill

Greg Nash


In the sprint to pass tax reform by the end of the year, Congress has unfortunately delivered a major blow to our nation’s nonprofit sector and the communities it serves.

The tax reform bill signed into law last week provoked a spirited debate about whether the middle class or the wealthy would be the main beneficiaries of the first comprehensive tax reform for over three decades. Ancillary debates broke out over the ability to deduct taxes paid to state and local government and the interest paid on mortgages.

Lost in the political shuffle were two aspects of the bill that represent a direct hit on our nation’s nonprofit sector and those the sector serves.

{mosads}The first issue is the charitable deduction. Under current law, the charitable deduction is only available to the roughly 35 percent of filers who itemize their tax returns. By doubling the standard deduction, estimates are that between 90-95 percent of filers will not itemize their returns, thus walling off the charitable deduction from all but 5-10 percent of filers.

 

The Tax Policy Center estimates this change will reduce charitable giving by up to $20 billion a year.

According to Independent Sector, this is roughly the equivalent of losing all charitable giving in Vermont, North Dakota, Alaska, South Dakota, Maine, Wyoming, Rhode Island, Delaware, Montana, West Virginia, New Hampshire, Hawaii, New Mexico, Idaho, Nebraska, Nevada, Arkansas, Mississippi and Kansas combined. 

A recent study by George Washington University concluded that this new law will result in a loss of at least 220,000 non-profit sector jobs.

The new law also more than doubles the size of estates that will be subject to the federal estate tax, to over $22 million. Reducing the number of estates subject to the estate tax will hurt our country’s communities in a significant way.

The biggest casualty will be charitable giving. How many people currently pay estate taxes? Nationwide, currently only 1 in 500 estates are large enough to be taxed. That number will drop significantly under the reformed tax code.

The estate tax creates a strong incentive for the super-wealthy to give to charity rather than pay the tax. Eliminating that incentive for many more estates will cause a substantial decline in very large gifts: the kind that can be truly transformational for charities, colleges, hospitals and the arts.

The best evidence we have comes from the one recent year (2010) during which the estate tax was not in force: Charitable bequests dropped by 37 percent from the previous year (2009), and then rose by 92 percent in the following year (2011) when the estate tax was restored.

There have already been calls to go back and make corrections to the tax bill early in 2018. House and Senate leadership have acknowledged that the final bill drafting process was a rushed one.

Those in the charitable and philanthropic sectors hope that the issues of the charitable contribution and the estate tax will be topics for conversation and correction in the new year. This should include the idea of making the charitable deduction universal, so that all filers, including non-itemizers, can utilize this provision of the tax code.

It is hard to imagine that our leaders intended for this harm to come to America’s nonprofits. We hope once the fog of the partisan battle has cleared, they will realize they should be working together in a bipartisan way to support the sector that is so essential to our country and our communities.

Chris Gates is a senior policy advisor for the Global Social Enterprise Initiative at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business. He previously served as president of the National Civic League and executive director of Philanthropy for Active Civic Engagement.

Tags economy Estate tax in the United States Itemized deduction nonprofits Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Taxation in the United States Wealth in the United States

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