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Don’t forget the other stakeholder - the general public.

Yes it sucks for developers, but does it make any difference for any other employee? Why does Joe’s plumbing have to pay those taxes, but Jane’s AdTech company doesn’t?

Sure, there are benefits to investing in R&D in general, and tech has fueled a lot of growth, so incentivizing it has likely paid off for the whole economy. But will that forever be true? Maybe?






If Joe's plumbing hires an assistant plumber, they get to fully deduct the assistant's salary.

Why do I, the hardworking tax payer, have to subsidize Joe Plumber, who already has a big house with a pool?


In some parts of the world we have a sales tax which is a form of minimum tax on business outputs. The consumers of plumbing and software pay 10% regardless on a businesses profitability.

Yeah, VAT would help tremendously in alternative here, but for gestures at United States sociopolitics reasons the existing U.S. taxation methods can’t keep up and won’t be repaired any time soon. I could boil the ocean on this down to bedrock (citizens should be taxed on [redacted] in excess of threshold, services and goods should be VATed) but I stand by “section 174 with a sub-100% cap” as what at minimum would have balanced research and taxation.

In many parts of the US there are sales taxes, but they are state or local taxes, not federal taxes.

Joe's plumbing doesn't have to pay those taxes. Operational costs, including paying employees for normal operations, is deductable.

But with the change, the cost of R&D employees is now only partially deductible (right now, you can eventually deduct the full amount over the course of several years), and software development has to be considered R&D.




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