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Smaller corporate tax bills reflect proper investment treatment, not new loopholes

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Summary

Tax Foundation op-ed explains that smaller corporate tax bills under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) reflect proper investment treatment through permanent 100% bonus depreciation and R&D expensing, not new tax loopholes. The analysis argues these provisions correct a major flaw in the tax code by allowing businesses to deduct investment costs immediately.

What changed

This Tax Foundation op-ed analyzes the One Big Beautiful Bill Act's corporate tax provisions, specifically permanent 100% bonus depreciation for most investments and expensing for R&D. The author contends these provisions correct a prior flaw where depreciation deductions lost value over time.

For tax professionals and corporate accountants, this article provides context for explaining lower tax bills to stakeholders during earnings season. The analysis frames investment expensing as proper tax treatment rather than tax avoidance, which may inform compliance and financial reporting communications.

What to do next

  1. Monitor for updates
  2. Review corporate tax planning strategies regarding depreciation and expensing

Archived snapshot

Apr 9, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

As corporate earnings season begins, headlines will highlight companies reporting little to no federal income taxes under the new tax A tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. law. The likely reaction: outrage and confusion. But smaller corporate tax bills are not evidence of new giveaways or loopholes. They are evidence the tax code is finally treating investment the way it should.

Last year, President Trump enacted the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). For individuals, it avoided an automatic tax hike on 62 percent of filers by making Trump’s 2017 tax cuts permanent. For businesses, among its many changes, the OBBBA provided permanent 100 percent bonus depreciation Depreciation is a measurement of the “useful life” of a business asset, such as machinery or a factory, to determine the multiyear period over which the cost of that asset can be deducted from taxable income. Instead of allowing businesses to deduct the cost of investments immediately (i.e., full expensing), depreciation requires deductions to be taken over time, reducing their value and disco for most investment and expensing for research and development (R&D).

Although not perfect, the law’s expensing provisions fixed a major flaw in the tax code.

This is a preview of our full op-ed originally published in MarketWatch.

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About the Author

Expert

Erica York

Vice President of Federal Tax Policy Erica York is Vice President of Federal Tax Policy with Tax Foundation’s Center for Federal Tax Policy. Her analysis has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Politico, and other national and international media outlets.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Tax Foundation
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Public companies Financial advisers
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Tax planning Financial reporting
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Taxation
Operational domain
Finance
Topics
Corporate Governance

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