Tax break for corporate meal expenses inserted into coronavirus aid package

Tax break for corporate meal expenses inserted into coronavirus aid package

Since the 1980s, businesses have only been able to deduct 50 percent of their meal expenses off their federal taxes. A proposal championed by the White House and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) would increase that deduction to 100 percent allowing companies to deduct the full cost of a business meal off their federal taxes.

Fed Chair Powell Opens a Big Can of Worms at His Press Conference

Fed Chair Powell Opens a Big Can of Worms at His Press Conference

What the Fed did back then, which it knows it can still do at the drop of a dime today, is to demand an adequate amount of securities as collateral from the Wall Street firms that request its emergency loans. There is zero need or rational reason to make the U.S. taxpayer backstop potential losses on Wall Street – particularly when today’s Wall Street funding problems began months before COVID-19 reared its head in the United States.