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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Rubio’s Olympic Medal Bill Would Give Michael Phelps Hundreds Of Thousands Of Dollars In Tax Breaks Rubios Olympic Medal Bill Would Give Michael Phelps Hundreds Of Thousands Of Dollars In Tax Breaks By Travis Waldron posted from ThinkProgress Economy on Aug 3, 2012 at 6:35 pm Rubio's tax plan would give Michael Phelps a tax break for eating Subway. Americans for Tax Reform, the anti-tax group headed by activist Grover Norquist, caused a stir this week when it released a report detailing the supposed tax burden Americas Olympic athletes face on the prize money they receive for winning medals. The Olympians, ATR said, would owe up to $9,000 in taxes on their medals and winnings, and that, the organization said, was a travesty even though the money hardly differs from other prizes (like lottery winnings) that are taxed as normal income. ATRs analysis contained blatant falsehoods Olympic medals are not subject to taxes, a fact confirmed both by the United States Olympic Committee and accountants who have handled Olympians taxes but that didnt stop anti-tax Republicans from leaping into action. Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) proposed legislation that would exempt Olympic winnings from taxation, but in his haste, he created a loophole that would allow athletes with big endorsements to claim hundreds of thousands in tax breaks, as accountant K. Sean Packard writes at TaxTVs blog: Senator Rubios bill, if passed, would fully exempt any prize or award won by the taxpayer in athletic competition in the Olympic Games. Any agent worth his/her salt would ensure that most, if not all, endorsement contracts for an Olympian include hefty bonuses for medals. For Phelps, this would include bonuses from Subway, Hilton, Omega, Speedo, Visa, Proctor and Gamble and Under Armour, and at least three others. Lochte would receive bonuses from Sprint, Gatorage, Gillette, Nissan, Speedo, AT&T, Proctor and Gamble, Mutual of Omaha and Ralph Lauren. Assuming each of Phelps and Lochtes endorsers match the USOCs medal bonuses of $25,000, Phelps could receive $300,000 tax-free from the USOC and his eleven endorsers for each gold he wins (two as of this publication) and Lochte could receive $250,000 for each of his two golds. Lochte and Phelps also have two silvers each and Lochte a bronze and each will receive bonuses from the USOC and likely from endorsers for those. In effect, a decent lawyer or tax accountant would be able to craft endorsement deals in a way that make large sums of compensation seem tied to Olympic performance, giving athletes like Phelps and Lochte huge tax breaks, all due to some faux outrage on the part of conservative tax activists. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: tom007 (#0)
I'm for everything that helps de-fund the beast.
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