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Making Work Pay tax credit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Making Work Pay tax credit was a personal credit provided in tax years 2009 and 2010 to U.S. federal income taxpayers.[1] It was authorized in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

The credit was given at a rate of 6.2 percent of earned income up to a maximum of $400 for individuals or $800 for married taxpayers. Making Work Pay could be claimed by single filers making between $8,100 per year and $95,000 per year. Joint filers in the range of $8,100 and $190,000 could claim it annually. Withholding formulas directed employers to increase take-home pay immediately without action from employees. Taxpayers with multiple jobs or self-employed had to adjust withholding to avoid inadvertently receiving multiple credits. Workers with multiple jobs, or unemployed, had the option to delay receiving the credit and receive instead a lump sum (all $400 to $800 at once) calculated on the tax return filed in the following year. Reconciling the credit required filing Schedule M with the Form 1040 personal income tax return.

The policy concept behind the Making Work Pay tax credit was to stimulate consumer spending, implemented as part of President Barack Obama's stimulus package in 2009. Because Making Work Pay contributed to higher take home pay by reducing withholding, it was assumed that the recipients would spend the majority, if not all, of the credit.

The credit was not extended to tax year 2011, and has not been considered since then; instead, Congress passed a payroll tax holiday for two years.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The tax hike nobody's talking about" Blake Ellis, CNN, 2010-07-27
  2. ^ "Federal Tax Cuts in the Bush, Obama, and Trump Years" Steve Wamhoff and Matthew Gardner, Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, 2018-07-11
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