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Trump vows to cut taxes on Social Security in bid to woo seniors

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Donald Trump pledged to eliminate taxes on Social Security payments for seniors, a move that would cut levies for some elderly Americans but further strain benefits for those who have yet to retire.

“Seniors should not pay taxes on Social Security and they won’t,” Trump said at a rally on Wednesday in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Trump’s pledge to cut taxes for elderly Americans, a key voting bloc, comes as the Republican nominee tries to recalibrate his campaign to focus on Vice President Kamala Harris rather than President Joe Biden, who quit the race on July 21. Trump has struggled to find an effective messaging strategy against Harris, employing attacks with racist and sexist overtones and invoking antisemitic tropes.

Donald Trump speaking at a rally
Former President Donald Trump

Travis Dove/Bloomberg

Trump, who earlier Wednesday questioned Harris’ embrace of her black identity in a personal and vitriolic attack, pivoted to an economic pitch, saying she would “totally destroy our Social Security system.” He also panned her for being weak on immigration and supporting efforts to “defund the police.”

The former president has made tax cuts a central promise of his campaign, but has shared few details. He’s pledged to renew his 2017 cuts on individuals and small businesses, which are set to expire next year, as well as eliminate taxes on tipped income. That’s a plan that could appeal to younger voters who are more likely to work in hospitality jobs, but the idea has been widely panned by economists.

Eliminating taxes on retirement benefits is also likely to draw criticism. Wiping out those levies would increase the deficit by up to $1.8 trillion through 2035, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. The group also said it would speed up the rate at which the trust funds would face shortfalls and retirees would see their benefits cut. Federal projections show payments are on track to be reduced starting in 2035. 

About 40% of retirees owe taxes on their Social Security benefits, depending on their income level, marital status and other sources of earnings, according to the Social Security Administration. Taxing the retirement benefits dates back to a 1983 law, signed by then President Ronald Reagan, intended to keep the popular program financially viable.

Trump’s idea to cut taxes on benefit payments would complicate conversations in Washington about large-scale plans to find new ways to fund Social Security, which have become more pressing with projections showing the program is becoming increasingly unsustainable. But changes to Social Security are politically risky because older Americans, who are directly benefiting from the payments, are an important source of votes for both parties.

Pennsylvania polls

The contest in Pennsylvania, perhaps the most important swing state that will decide the election, has tightened after Harris replaced Biden atop the Democratic ticket, according to recent polling, showing increased enthusiasm among young, Black and Hispanic voters for the vice president.

The Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll conducted after Biden withdrew showed that Trump had a four-point lead over Harris in Pennsylvania, down from the seven-point advantage the former president had in the survey early this month when Biden was still running.

Biden had clearly lost ground in the state since carrying it in 2020, said Berwood Yost, director of the Franklin & Marshall College Poll. Harris has energized voters who were a key part of Biden’s coalition but had soured on him because of his age or the economy, he said.

“We’ll see how long that continues, but Pennsylvania is back in play,” Yost said.

Harris is also seriously considering Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro to be her running mate, which would give her campaign in the state a boost. Shapiro is the most popular politician in the commonwealth and can appeal to rural and swing voters, Yost said.

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Accounting

IRS updates procedures list for accounting method changes

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Sign in front of IRS building in Washington, D.C.

Pamela Au/wingedwolf – Fotolia

The Internal Revenue Service has released Rev. Proc. 2025-23, which updates the list of automatic procedures for taxpayer-initiated requests for changes in methods of accounting.

 An “automatic change” is a change in method of accounting for which the taxpayer is eligible under Section 5.01(1) of Rev. Proc. 2015-13 for requesting the IRS commissioner’s consent for the requested year of change.

The 430-plus pages of changes cover: gross income, commodity credit loans, trade or business expenses, bad debts, interest expense and amortizable bond premium, depreciation or amortization, research or experimental expenditures, elective expensing provisions, computer software expenditures, start-up expenditures and organizational fees, capital expenditures, and uniform capitalization methods.

Changes also cover losses, expenses and interest in transactions between related taxpayers; deferred compensation; cash-to-accrual methods of accounting; taxable years of inclusion; discounted obligations; prepaid subscription income; long-term contracts; taxable years incurred; rent; inventories (including LIFO inventories); mark-to-market accounting; bank reserves for bad debts; insurance companies; discounted unpaid losses; and REMICs.

Examples are given for many of the changes. 

Rev. Proc. 2025-23 was slated to be in IRB 2025-24 dated June 9.

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Accounting

Pricing lessons: What the winners do differently

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Many CPA firms struggle to raise pricing and remove problematic clients. It may get brushed off as “no big deal,” but ignoring pricing and client mix harms the firm in significant ways: less revenue equals less growth and lower ability to pay staff well, lower profits for partners or capital to reinvest in the business, and unwieldy clients who burn out staff and partners alike for a paltry financial return.

After helping many firms in this area during strategic planning and retreats, here’s what I’ve seen the successful ones do.

Don’t shock the system

When we talk about increasing prices, many partners imagine an abrupt, across-the-board 20% fee increase and clients pouring out the doors as a result. I’ve seen firms be very successful using an incremental and client-specific approach. Segment your client list by service line and total fees. Consider the 80/20 rule: how many clients do you need to generate 80% of your revenue? It’s likely not as many as you think. Then have each partner recommend appropriate pricing adjustments for each client. If there’s a big gap between current fees and market rates, it may take a few years to get there (unless you’re OK with the possibility of losing them, which sometimes is advisable). Some clients may need only a 5% bump to get to market; some may need 150%. Do what makes sense for each client and total firm revenue.

Communication is the key

Often, partners relax once they grasp the reasons why pricing or client acceptance criteria need to improve: staffing crisis, wage increases, tech costs going up, inflation, undercharged for years, not enough hours to serve all the clients well, etc. Pull a Wall Street Journal article on any given day about the accounting industry, and you’ll have another reason your firm needs to evolve. Then explain that to your clients with empathy and sincerity. Almost all of them will understand.

You can keep some personal favorite clients

Many partners get skittish about changing pricing and client acceptance because they have a stable of long-time clients who have been way under market for years but have strong sentimental value. Whoever they are for you, you are allowed to keep them on one condition: accept that they may not be 20% (or some other meaningful amount) of your total book of business. I have great hope for the accounting industry because of the great care I’ve seen partners take of their clients. We don’t want to diminish that. We do want to run a sustainable business.

You’re worth it and so is your staff

Firms have reported gleeful results when they let their staff give input on clients. The staff know who the ungrateful, late, messy clients are. They also know the appreciative, clean, fun-to-work-with clients. It’s uncanny how some of the lowest-profit clients often fall into the first category. Economics aside, when you protect your staff from problematic clients through higher pricing (enough budget to do quality work) or firing clients who can’t work well with the firm, you send a strong message that you care. The same goes for partners. Firms that have a lot of A and B clients and aren’t afraid to shape up or ship out their lowest clients seem to have much higher enjoyment and peace of mind at work. Your team works hard for your clients, and the reciprocity of fair fees and behavior from them is only right.

If you want to join the firms that are finding success in fees and client mix, here are four ways to start:

1. Grade your clients: Rank them A through F, based on criteria like total fees, realization, growth potential, and how fun or hard it is to work with them.

2. Segment the list: Analyze your now graded client list. Who needs more attention? Who needs to get off the bus?

3. Make an action plan that is specific to each client: Granularity is your friend. By partner, by client, make next steps to improve fees or client behavior to meet current standards.

4. Keep meeting about it regularly: This is the most important step! Just making a list doesn’t count. Partners who regularly meet and act on their lists make big progress.

I know the journey can be uncomfortable, but firms on the other side prove it’s well worth it. Good luck!

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Accounting

Senate plans to deliver Trump-backed tip, overtime tax breaks

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Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Republicans in his chamber expect to deliver on President Donald Trump’s campaign promises to exempt tips, overtime pay, Social Security and auto loan interest from taxes.

“I think that the president as you know campaigned hard on no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, Social Security, interest on car loans — those were all things that are priorities for the administration and they were addressed in the House bill and I expect they will be in the Senate as well,” Thune told reporters.

The House bill, in lieu of a direct tax cut on Social Security, which would violate Senate budget rules, provided a $4,000 bonus deduction for per taxpayer age 65 and older with incomes up to $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 for married couples. The House provisions on tips, overtime, the elderly and car loans would all expire in 2029.

Thune’s comments come as Senate negotiators tweak the House-passed version of Trump’s giant tax package ahead of a self-imposed deadline to pass the measure before the July 4th holiday, with Thune saying Tuesday the Senate is very close to finishing its draft of the legislation. 

Earlier Tuesday, House Ways and Means Chair Jason Smith, whose committee is responsible for tax legislation, warned that any Senate version of the tax package that doesn’t include the tips and overtime breaks would be “dead on arrival” in the House.

Several Republican senators including Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina have expressed skepticism about the cost and economic wisdom of including the tax exemptions on tips and overtime pay. Senators have instead called for funds to be used to make temporary business tax breaks permanent.

Such a change would be a “no go” for House Republicans, Smith told Bloomberg TV. 

The Senate is now considering the massive tax and spending package after it passed the House by a single vote last month. If the Senate changes the legislation, the House must approve the revised version.

Senator Josh Hawley, a populist Republican, said Trump told him Tuesday morning that tax-exempt tips and overtime, as well as a tax cut for the elderly, are the most important provisions in the bill. 

House Speaker Mike Johnson also has urged senators not to remove or scale back provisions in the legislation that exempt tips and overtime pay from income tax through 2028.

“This is an important promise for us to keep,” Johnson told reporters earlier Tuesday.

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