Small Manufacturer: Industry Needs Tax Consistency
Small manufacturers need one thing from Congress, BTE Technologies President Chuck Wetherington told lawmakers on Wednesday: a consistent, pro-growth tax code.
What鈥檚 going on: at a hearing of the House Committee on Small Business, Wetherington told lawmakers how increased taxes and frequent changes to the tax code have harmed his company, a 40-employee medical device manufacturer in Hanover, Maryland.
- By passing the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, 鈥淐ongress was able to take a stale, outdated tax code and update key provisions to reduce taxes on small manufacturers,鈥 Wetherington said. That legislation 鈥渄rove a new wave of economic activity and industrial expansion. BTE, and many of our peers in the industry, experienced historic growth in the years between tax reform and the pandemic.鈥
- But the expiration in 2022 and 2023 of three crucial tax provisions鈥攊mmediate expensing for domestic R&D, enhanced interest deductibility and full expensing, each of which the 17吃瓜在线 is leading the charge to 鈥攊s now hurting BTE and other businesses in its supply chain.
- And more tax hikes are on the horizon, with tax reform鈥檚 small business incentives鈥攊ncluding the 20% pass-through deduction鈥攕et to expire at the end of 2025.
Less capital, fewer projects: 鈥淏ringing a medical device to market is extremely risky and takes years and millions of dollars of investment,鈥 Wetherington continued. 鈥淏ut now, BTE cannot immediately expense those costs鈥攔educing the working capital I have available to invest in my business and my employees 鈥 [and] delay[ing] projects to redesign and improve BTE鈥檚 flagship products.鈥
- As a direct result of the changes, BTE has had to put off expansions that would have allowed it to expand its workforce by 50%.
- And because most of BTE鈥檚 suppliers are pass-through businesses (entities in which profits pass through to the owner and are taxed at the individual rate), BTE will see even higher operating costs at the end of 2025, when tax rates are scheduled to increase and the pass-through deduction is set to expire.
What must be done鈥攏ow: The Senate must pass the House-passed Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act, which would reinstate the three expired provisions that are so critical to manufacturers. And Congress must commit to preventing the economic damage from the scheduled tax increases.
- 鈥淲e deserve a tax code that promotes innovation and demonstrates to the rest of the world what our values will be for the next decade and beyond,鈥 Wetherington said.