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HR 4048 100th Congress House Taxation Accounting Building leases Business losses Corporations Excise tax Foundations Home repair and improvement Housing and Community Development Housing and Housing Finance Housing finance Income tax Interest Investment tax credit Investments Loans Low-income housing Residential rehabilitation Tax credits Tax-exempt organizations

Community Revitalization Tax Act of 1988

Introduced: March 1, 1988 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Mar 1, 1988
Referred to House Committee on Ways and Means.
Mar 1, 1988
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Community Revitalization Tax Act of 1988 - Amends Internal Revenue Code income tax accounting rules limiting passive activity losses and credits to eliminate the disallowance of credits in this context.

Revises the limitation on the general business credit to allow a maximum annual credit equal to the first $20,000 of an individual taxpayer's income tax liability plus 20 percent of any excess liability.

Amends provisions that reduce the investment credit base by nonqualified nonrecourse financing amounts to apply them to certain qualified rehabilitation property as if the property were subject to the at-risk rules associated with the low-income housing credit.

Permits a tax-exempt organization to offset the amount of any general business credit against its unrelated business income tax liability.

Revises the definition of "qualifying distribution" for purposes of the tax on a private foundation's failure to distribute income. Includes as qualifying any amount of interest foregone on a below-market loan made to a tax-exempt organization to operate a qualified low-income building.

Includes as a qualified rehabilitation expenditure for tax credit purposes any expenditure in connection with the rehabilitation of a low-income building leased to a tax-exempt entity.

Permits a pooled income fund having substantially all of its assets invested exclusively in qualified low-income buildings to have one or more corporations as income beneficiaries, each with a 20-year life.

What's happening now March 1, 1988

Referred to House Committee on Ways and Means.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1