summary
Introduced
In Committee
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
112th Congress
Bill Summary
Gas Tax Holiday Act - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to suspend the excise tax on highway motor fuels for 45 days beginning 7 days after the enactment of this Act. Expresses the sense of Congress that consumers should immediately receive the benefit from the suspension of such tax (i.e., 18.4 cents per gallon tax reduction). Denies or limits for any company that is not a small, independent oil and gas company certain tax benefits for one year, including: (1) amortization of geological and geophysical expenditures; (2) the tax credits for producing oil and gas from marginal wells and for enhanced oil recovery costs; (3) the tax deductions for intangible drilling and development costs for oil and gas wells and for tertiary injectant expenses; (4) the percentage depletion allowance; (5) the exemption from limits on the deductibility of passive activity losses; and (6) the tax deduction for income attributable to domestic production activities relating to oil, natural gas, or any primary product thereof. Prohibits the use of the last-in, first-out (LIFO) accounting method by major integrated oil companies. Limits or denies the foreign tax credit and tax deferrals for amounts paid or accrued by a dual capacity taxpayer to a foreign country or U.S. possession for any period with respect to combined foreign oil and gas income. Defines "dual capacity taxpayer" as a person who is subject to a levy of a foreign country or U.S. possession and receives (or will receive) directly or indirectly a specific economic benefit from such county or possession. Directs the Secretary of the Treasury to extend the one-year denial of tax benefits to any company that is not a small, independent oil and gas company if revenues raised during that period are insufficient to cover the cost of suspending the excise taxes on higway motor fuels.
AI Summary
This bill, titled the Gas Tax Holiday Act, proposes to suspend the federal excise tax on highway motor fuels for 45 days, starting seven days after enactment, with Congress expressing the hope that consumers will immediately benefit from the 18.4 cents per gallon reduction. To offset the cost of this tax holiday, the bill denies or limits various tax benefits for one year to companies that are not considered "small, independent oil and gas companies," which are defined as companies that are not large, integrated oil companies. These denied benefits include deductions for geological and geophysical expenditures, tax credits for producing oil from marginal wells and for enhanced oil recovery, deductions for intangible drilling costs and tertiary injectant expenses, the percentage depletion allowance, exemptions from passive loss limits, and deductions for domestic production activities related to oil and natural gas. Additionally, major integrated oil companies are prohibited from using the last-in, first-out (LIFO) accounting method, and "dual capacity taxpayers" (companies subject to foreign taxes that also receive specific economic benefits from that foreign country) will have their foreign tax credits and deferrals limited for oil and gas income. The Secretary of the Treasury is also directed to extend these tax benefit denials if the revenue generated from them is insufficient to cover the cost of the fuel tax suspension.
Committee Categories
Budget and Finance
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means. (on 05/12/2011)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-congress/house-bill/1889/all-info |
| BillText | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr1889ih/pdf/BILLS-112hr1889ih.pdf |
| Bill | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr1889ih/pdf/BILLS-112hr1889ih.pdf.pdf |
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