Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Blackman & Stark: State Charitable Tax Credits and Federal Funding

Philip C. Blackman (Penn State) and Kirk J. Stark (UCLA) have posted "Too Good to Be True?  How State Charitable Tax Credits Could Increase Federal Funding for California" to SSRN.  Here is an abstract of the article:

 

 An IRS chief counsel memorandum published in 2010 found that a taxpayer was permitted to claim a charitable contribution deduction for the full amount of a gift, even thought a substantial portion of the gift was effectively refunded to the taxpayer through a charitable state tax credit. In this article, Blackman and Stark explain that the IRS memorandum permits states to adopt charitable tax credits that effectively enable taxpayers to convert state taxes to charitable gifts — a strategy that would be attractive to alternative minimum taxpayers. Those state charitable tax credits (some with extraordinarily high credit percentages) appear to be on the rise, perhaps in part because they effectively enable a transfer of revenue from the federal government to the states. The authors believe the memorandum should be repudiated (as a matter of appropriate federal tax policy), but if it is not, states should consider taking advantage of it. The article discusses how the strategy applies in the case of proposed California legislation that would permit a 60 percent tax credit for contributions to a state fund designed to increase financial support for low- and middle-income students to pursue secondary education.

 

NAM

https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/nonprofit/2013/10/state-charitable-tax-credits-and-federal-funding.html

Publications – Articles | Permalink

TrackBack URL for this entry:

https://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef019affbdf756970d

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Blackman & Stark: State Charitable Tax Credits and Federal Funding:

Comments

Post a comment