
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Melanie Lauridsen, vice president–Tax Policy & Advocacy for the AICPA, reflected on how election results might inform future tax legislation and why any change in administration and tax policy can make it more difficult for practitioners seeking clarity.
Lauridsen also discussed advocacy related to beneficial ownership information (BOI) reporting and what might change related to IRS funding, the corporate tax rate, and more in this episode of the Journal of Accountancy podcast.
What you’ll learn from this episode:
· An update on AICPA advocacy related to BOI reporting relief.
· Why Lauridsen expects any changes to the expiring provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) to be “hybrid” — as opposed to all TCJA provisions becoming permanent.
· Discussion about the future of the deduction limit for state and local taxes, aka the SALT cap.
· The fate of IRS funding from the Inflation Reduction Act — and why a “rebalance” might be possible.
· Lauridsen’s summation that 2025 “is a huge tax year.”
4
7272 ratings
Melanie Lauridsen, vice president–Tax Policy & Advocacy for the AICPA, reflected on how election results might inform future tax legislation and why any change in administration and tax policy can make it more difficult for practitioners seeking clarity.
Lauridsen also discussed advocacy related to beneficial ownership information (BOI) reporting and what might change related to IRS funding, the corporate tax rate, and more in this episode of the Journal of Accountancy podcast.
What you’ll learn from this episode:
· An update on AICPA advocacy related to BOI reporting relief.
· Why Lauridsen expects any changes to the expiring provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) to be “hybrid” — as opposed to all TCJA provisions becoming permanent.
· Discussion about the future of the deduction limit for state and local taxes, aka the SALT cap.
· The fate of IRS funding from the Inflation Reduction Act — and why a “rebalance” might be possible.
· Lauridsen’s summation that 2025 “is a huge tax year.”
257 Listeners
4,334 Listeners
3,179 Listeners
179 Listeners
412 Listeners
72 Listeners
112 Listeners
90 Listeners
336 Listeners
1,021 Listeners
249 Listeners
2,959 Listeners
40 Listeners
16 Listeners
13 Listeners