How a Payroll-Tax Holiday Affects Small Businesses

March 25, 2010 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (5)

Signs of economic recovery might be appearing, but for the most part, small businesses are not seeing them. The National Federation of Independent Business's Index of Small Business Optimism—which measures small-business owners' sentiment about the economy—fell 1.3 points in February. It was just 7 points higher than the lowest-ever level, recorded in March 2009. Washington is trying to change the mood with a new tax incentive aimed directly at small businesses. A tax credit "to go to over 1 million small businesses who hire new workers" was President Obama's big promise to Main Street in his State of the Union address, and a similar proposal recently reached Obama's desk in the form of the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act.

[See 7 Stressors Sapping the Middle Class.]

Supporters in Congress claim that the bill will create hundreds of thousands of jobs by making it cheaper for businesses to add new employees. The good news is that small businesses may be more likely than larger businesses to use the incentives in the bill to add jobs that would not have otherwise been created. The bad news is that not many small businesses will find the jobs bill's incentives appealing in the first place.

The tax component of the bill is simple. Employers currently pay Social Security taxes at 6.2 percent of each worker's wages. Social Security taxes are not levied on wages over $106,800. The bill offers a "tax holiday": Employers get out of paying the tax for the rest of the year for each unemployed worker they hire at a salary under $106,800. To qualify as unemployed under the terms of the bill, the employee must have been out of work for at least 60 days before being hired. If new employees stay at the job for at least 52 weeks, employers can cash in a $1,000 tax credit on their 2011 tax return.

The number of jobs that these incentives will create is in dispute. The Congressional Budget Office analyzed a similar policy idea that would give a one-year payroll-tax holiday to employers that expand their payroll from 2009 to 2010. The CBO reports that this policy would add eight to 18 jobs for every $1 million spent on tax breaks. Since the tax portion of the jobs bill costs $13 billion, some analysts have been reported as saying that the bill will create between 104,000 and 234,000 jobs.

[See Small-Business Tax Breaks in 2010.]

But the policy analyzed by the CBO ties the tax holiday to payrolls. An employer must hire more people in 2010 than it did in 2009 in order to receive the tax break. But with the tax holiday passed by Congress, it's all about the employment status of the worker. If the worker has not been unemployed for an extended period, then the business has no extra incentive to hire that worker.

That restriction could limit the number of businesses able or willing to cash in on the tax holiday. "Most people, when they go out and hire somebody, they hire the best person they can get," says Cap Willey, managing director of CBIZ Tofias, a New England accounting firm that works with many small businesses. "One of the last things they will think about is whether or not that person is employed."

Even if a business owner can find a job candidate who has been unemployed for 60 days or more, the economy is still weak enough that many businesses will not be able to afford to take on more employees, tax break or not. In a recent video released by the National Federation of Independent Business, several business owners who are members of the group expressed skepticism about a payroll-tax holiday. "I have to have sales in order to generate income that would allow me to hire somebody else, so a tax credit doesn't do me any good at all," says John Raney, owner of the Texas Aggieland Bookstore in College Station, Texas.

"Basically, it's not going to work for me, because until I have a customer base that's coming into the restaurant, I don't need to hire new people," says Karen Oertel, owner of the Harris Crab House restaurant in Grasonville, Md. According to the NFIB's most recent survey, only 4 percent of firms report that now is a good time to expand, compared with 3 percent the same time last year. The survey also finds a net decrease in the number of businesses planning to add jobs. One percent of firms report that they plan to decrease hiring in the next three months, compared with 3 percent last year.

Michael Ettlinger, vice president for economic policy at the Center for American Progress, argues that while a tax break might not persuade most businesses to take on new employees, some will be right on the edge of being able to afford to hire a new person. The jobs bill will provide that extra push to make hiring possible. But "that's only going to be at the margins. There will be very few businesses that are right at that tipping point," he says.

The businesses at that tipping point might be more likely to be smaller firms with a handful of employees, as opposed to larger corporations. "I would expect small employers to be more likely to be affected by this because of their flexibility," says Ettlinger. Small businesses can easily recognize their basic hiring abilities. "In the case of a large employer, they have a longer planning horizon on expanding employment. They don't expand or contract their workforce as quickly," says Ettlinger.

But these small businesses on the margins will not be the typical companies that benefit from the jobs bill. Instead, businesses that are already capitalized enough to hire—and would have done so this year anyway—will get an extra windfall. "There are millions of jobs being lost and created every month," says Ettlinger. "As a matter of basic arithmetic, most of the money will go to hires that would have happened anyway."

Tags:
small business,
taxes

Reader Comments Read all comments (5)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

they should have DEBATED the health care lol

jerry of WV 3:58PM August 20, 2011

Enough is Enough!

Taxes on labor income and on consumption negatively affect household consumption and savings. Under a high tax burden, the firms also can’t afford the costs of the factors of production (rent on capital and wages for labor). Taxation also reduces the incentive to produce more goods and services, since a large portion of your earnings is taken away by the State, so it’s easy to understand why people are losing their jobs and the majority of Americans are suffering at the hand of their own elected officials: BIG Government!

New video exposes the IRS

View online at http://economicsforliberty.wordpress.com

Orphe D of DC 11:22AM April 14, 2010

One thing that these experts do not think about , is that most of these smaller businesses that have cut payroll to survive , are soon going to have used up their reserve cash and will be going belly up .

Lemm of OH 9:43PM March 31, 2010

Most Connected Company

Find out how America’s best companies are succeeding by tapping big data, mobile solutions, social media, and crowdsourcing to adapt and compete in an increasingly connected world.

See the companies »

advertisement

Slide Shows

Best-Sellers to Help Your 2013 Finances

Seeking advice? Check out these acclaimed financial books.

10 Warning Signs of Identity Theft

About 10 million Americans fall victim each year.

Items You Should Buy Online

Skip the store to save money and time.

Latest Video

advertisement