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Small Business: Tax Cut Deal Won't Spur Hiring

First Posted: 12/10/10 07:50 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:20 PM ET

Small Business Tax Cuts

CHICAGO (By Deborah L. Cohen): Extending Bush-era tax breaks won't be enough to encourage business owners like Brad Schulman to begin hiring.

"They've got a noose around small business," said Schulman, founder of Northbrook, Illinois-based Green Planet Bottling (www.greenplanetbottling.com), a maker of eco-friendly plant-based water bottles. "I've got no money to reinvest."

Schulman is a proponent of extending tax relief across the board, arguing it would act as a psychological boost to the small business community. But he added other policy changes must occur before he expands his 10-man operation, which has been growing steadily despite the down economy and is set to post revenue in excess of $5 million this year.

Foremost, there must be substantial moves to improve small companies' access to capital at a time when banks are still reluctant to lend, Schulman said. A life-long Democrat, the 45-year-old broke ranks and voted Republican in last month's midterm elections. He added he won't be enticed to hire new employees now based on the prospect of better tax returns in the future.

"That thought process will remain front and center because we need to keep the lights on," said Schulman.

This week President Barack Obama unveiled a deal with Republicans that would extend the Bush-era tax rates for all Americans. The compromise followed a largely symbolic bill passed late last week by the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives that limited extended tax cuts to dual-income households earning below $250,000, the threshold originally promoted by the Obama administration.

HOT-BUTTON ISSUE

The tax issue has been an emotional one for many in the small business community, ranging from struggling mom-and-pops to the more well-heeled entrepreneurs that Democrats argued could afford floating additional tax dollars to the Feds.

Longtime small business advocacy groups such as the National Federation of Independent Business and the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council lobbied for extended relief with no income limits. On the other side, a network of business owners called Business for Shared Prosperity is opposed to extending the cuts for those in the top income brackets.

"I think it makes financial sense and I think it's also the right thing to do in terms of my personal philosophy," said David Bolotsky, a Business for Shared Prosperity petitioner and the CEO of New York-based Internet gift retailer UncommonGoods (www.uncommongoods.com).

"We're focused on the long term in terms of growing the business, so a change in the tax rate is not going to alter what I need to do for competitive and strategic reasons to grow the business," said Bolotsky, 47, who declined to share financials. Others were less political but equally opinionated about what they perceived as an issue that would have little bearing on their day-to-day decisions.

They include John Jordan, a long-time Washington-based publicist who has run his own one-man shop since 2003. He said paying higher taxes would not have influenced his business decisions in the coming year. Jordan, who also supports letting the cuts expire for wealthier owners, said his combined household income exceeded the $250,000 Obama relief threshold.

"I don't gain or go after clients, or try to reach retainers with an eye toward marginal tax rates," said the 47-year-old. "You do what you gotta do. You don't worry about running the tax numbers."

MOVING PARTS

Tax attorney and small business expert Barbara Weltman is skeptical that members of Congress understand what it takes to keep a small company going in a rough economy.

"If a business owner has to pay higher taxes on net earnings, it's that much less available to do other things we want businesses to do - hire, buy equipment, expand," she said. "I just don't think they understand how businesses work."

Weltman, herself the owner of two small businesses, favors longer-term solutions that will remove the uncertainty plaguing many small companies. She supports making permanent extensions of the tax relief at all income levels and longer-term tax reform.

"These year-by-year extensions don't make it possible for people to plan," she said. "Congress has to meet and deal with this over and over again."

Schulman agrees there are still too many moving parts in the current economy to prompt significant capital outlays for his business. The value of his home - among his largest assets - dropped 30 percent during the recession. Meanwhile, Green Planet Bottling is facing higher healthcare costs and the first of his two teenage children is set to head off to college next year.

"Why would I want to invest money in a down market unless I know it's close to being an up market?" said Schulman. "I'm still not hiring anybody. They got to take the noose off of me."


Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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CHICAGO (By Deborah L. Cohen): Extending Bush-era tax breaks won't be enough to encourage business owners like Brad Schulman to begin hiring. "They've got a noose around small business," said Schulma...
CHICAGO (By Deborah L. Cohen): Extending Bush-era tax breaks won't be enough to encourage business owners like Brad Schulman to begin hiring. "They've got a noose around small business," said Schulma...
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01:51 AM on 12/23/2010
It is unfortunate that there seems to be no common sense regarding this matter. Everyone wants the services, but no one wants to pay for them. It seems to be an American attitude that all money will just appear out of nowhere to fund the projects we all take part in such as education, transportation and so forth. I am a firm supporter of the repeal of the tax cuts for those making over $ 250,000.

www.simplifythis.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arts4u
It's better than a reality show.
10:48 PM on 12/16/2010
Grants for small (and I do mean small, not subsidiaries of large corporations) would help provide them with funding to hire. Specify that the funding must go to hiring. In turn, those new employees could help spur the economy's growth. Also, we should be insisting that large corporations return some of their outsourced jobs back to the US. In order to contribute to the restoration of our country's stability, this condition could have been applied during the initial bailout packages they received, but we missed this opportunity.
09:37 AM on 12/14/2010
Maybe the new weeper of the house can solve all our problems.
03:53 AM on 12/13/2010
See www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t15.htm for the official jobless numbers (unemployed U-3 vs. underemployed U-6), www.shadowstats.com for the proof that it's even higher (but down 0.9%) at 21.6% not 17.0% or 9.8%, then www.usdebtclock.org to track debts state/national/international. See www.bls.gov/emp/ep_chart_001.htm to compare median income by education; it's too bad that American college graduation rates are pathetic compared to other developed nations according to http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-reich/americas-future-in-the-gl_b_795369.html ["America's Future in the Global Economy: This Week's Words and Deeds"] The correct answer is to blow up the top MARGINAL income tax rates to 2000 rates (39.6%) or higher to pay for the $3T war with $4T in taxes for ten years, partially covering the $2.5T in unwise tax cuts to the rich who hoarded their cash with few actual investments or hirings.
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
07:18 PM on 12/12/2010
The increased deductibility of capital might help a bit. But if the small businesses don't have cash and can't get a bank loan, pffft.
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
07:15 PM on 12/12/2010
Great irony with that Shulman guy. Small business owner switches to voting R
In the midterms and is now complaining that extending the tax cuts doesn't help him hire.

Brilliant, as they say in England.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
05:32 PM on 12/12/2010
    Cutting taxes has little or no affect when there is 18+%  unemployment.  Tax reduction benefits the wealthy and financial interests.  Obama is a banking partner, therefore, the gravy goes their way while most Americans receive poverty and servitude.
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G R
Ad astra per aspera
04:37 PM on 12/12/2010
So now the super wealthy, the elites (the Kings and Queens of America, these are the Republicans and their super rich lobbyists, by the way), want to rely upon: " a psychological boost to the small business community." The Small Business Community cannot create the number of jobs that would have any impact on America's 15 to 22 MILLION unemployed, even if it is only "psychological", look that word up! It means 'all in the mind', but not in reality.. This Republican mind game continues and one has to wonder if Americans are truly sucking it up.
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WakeUp2021
"I'm for Romney!" - George W Bush 5/15/12
06:49 AM on 12/12/2010
My favorite statistic:

Bill Clinton in 8 years created more private sector jobs than Reagan, Bush 1 and Bush 2 combined.

2nd favorite statistic:

If Jimmy Carter had 8 years he would have created more private sector jobs than Reagan, Bush 1 and Bush 2 combined.
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WakeUp2021
"I'm for Romney!" - George W Bush 5/15/12
06:38 AM on 12/12/2010
So our problem is small business owners are m0r0ns??? Marginal tax rates were 90% plus in the 1950s. The economy did just fine!!!
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conservicide
I don't play nice.
02:26 PM on 12/11/2010
TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS

TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS

TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:08 PM on 12/11/2010
I don't feel any sadness for this family. Many more have died and struggled because of this families ruthlessness. I just wish they went after more billionaire crooks.
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01:10 PM on 12/11/2010
wrong thread
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litespeedrider
Ignorance can be cured, stupidity is forever!
12:35 PM on 12/11/2010
If tax relief won't spur hiring, then there is no need for it.
04:57 AM on 12/11/2010
Using tax cuts to create jobs is like pushing a string.
01:59 PM on 12/11/2010
Using tax cuts to create jobs is like a little boy peeing in his pants. At first, he might like the immediate warmth it brings. However, after the warm sensation quickly ceases, he'll feel uncomfortable, irritated and worse off than before he did it.
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uniquindividual
I'm unique and so are you
07:56 PM on 12/10/2010
Small business depends on a large middle/working class.

They have a problem that they created with their support of tax, debt, trade and military policies
11:15 PM on 12/10/2010
Doesn't any business, small or large, depend on a large middle and/or working class?
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uniquindividual
I'm unique and so are you
01:46 AM on 12/12/2010
No.
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Brian Gilmer
Respect the bunny.
09:52 AM on 12/12/2010
Not defense the defense industry. It does not depend on traditional consumer spending at all.