Senators agree to
extend home buyer tax credit
BY
STEPHEN OHLEMACHER
Associated Press
WASHINGTON -- Senators agreed Wednesday to extend a
popular tax credit for first-time home buyers and to offer a
reduced credit to some repeat
buyers.
The tax
credit provides up to $8,000 to first-time home buyers but
is set to expire at the end of November. The Commerce
Department said Wednesday that new home sales fell 3.6
percent in September, and some industry representatives
blamed uncertainty about the tax
credit.
Senators agreed to extend the existing tax credit for
first-time home buyers while offering a reduced credit of up
to $6,500 to repeat buyers who have owned their current
homes for at least five years, said Regan Lachapelle, a
spokeswoman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.
The tax
credits would be available to home buyers who sign sales
agreements by the end of April. They would have until the
end of June to close on their new homes, according to a
summary of the legislation being circulated among
lawmakers.
Senators were still negotiating the expansion of a
separate tax credit that lets money-losing businesses get
refunds for taxes paid in previous years, providing them
with an immediate source of cash.
Senators in both political parties were hoping to add
both tax provisions to a bill that would give people running
out of unemployment insurance benefits up to 20 more weeks
of federal aid. The Senate could vote on the overall bill as
early as Thursday, but lawmakers were still haggling over
several unrelated amendments Wednesday
evening.
Popular
bills like the one to extend unemployment benefits often
attract amendments that would have a difficult time passing
on their own.
Republicans were demanding that they be given a chance
to offer amendments to restrict federal aid to the
beleaguered community activist group ACORN and on requiring
that people receiving unemployment insurance be processed
through E-Verify, an Internet-based system that employers
use to check on the immigration status of new
hires.
Majority Democrats have refused to add the
amendments.
If the
Senate passes the bill, it would go to the House, which
passed a similar bill extending unemployment benefits last
month. House leaders have also said they support extending
the tax credit for home buyers.
Sen.
Chris Dodd, D-Conn., has been negotiating for several weeks
with Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., to craft an extended tax
credit for home buyers that would pass the
Senate.
Lawmakers didn't release a cost estimate for extending
the tax credit, though some representatives said
uncertainty about the tax credit is hurting new home sales.
September's decline was the first since
March.
About
1.4 million first-time home buyers have qualified for the
credit through August. The National Association of Realtors
estimates that 350,000 of them would not have purchased
their homes without the credit.
The tax
credit for money-losing businesses is a favorite among
Republican lawmakers. Businesses could get tax refunds by
using losses from 2008 and 2009 to offset taxable profits
made in the previous five years. Under current law, they can
only offset profits from the previous two
years.
The
provision would help a variety of industries, including
retailers, manufacturers and home builders, though it's
expensive.
``It's
clearly a way to put cash in the hands of some major
economic players,'' said Clint Stretch, a tax policy expert
at Deloitte Tax.
A
similar proposal that was ultimately dropped from the
economic stimulus package enacted in February would have
cost nearly $20 billion over 10 years. Lawmakers are working
to reduce the price tag.
Because
people are so strapped for cash, this is a good way to get
refunds when businesses need them for operating expenses,
said Rachelle Bernstein, vice president and tax counsel for
the National Retail Federation.
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