Some tax-cutting strategies make good financial sense. Other
tax strategies are simply bad ideas, often because tax considerations are
allowed to override basic economics.
Here’s one example of the tax tail wagging the economic dog.
Let’s say that you run an unincorporated consulting business. You want some
additional tax write-offs, so you decide to buy $10,000 of office furniture
that you don’t really need. If you’re in the 28% tax bracket and you deduct the
entire cost, this purchase will trim your tax bill by $2,800 (28% of $10,000).
But even after the tax break, you’ll still be out of pocket $7,200 ($10,000
minus $2,800) -- and stuck with furniture that you don’t really need.
There are other situations in which people often focus on
tax considerations and ignore the bigger financial picture. For example:
* Someone increases the size of a home mortgage, solely to
get a larger tax deduction for mortgage interest.
* A homeowner hesitates to pay off a mortgage, just to keep
the interest deduction.
* Someone turns down extra income, because it might “push
them into a higher tax bracket.”
* An investor holds an appreciated asset indefinitely,
solely to avoid paying the capital gains tax.
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