Fiscal Policy: Many voters are looking forward to  2011, hoping a new Congress will put the country back on the right  track. But unless something's done soon, the new year will also come  with a raft of tax hikes — including a return of the death tax — that  will be real killers.
Through the end of this year, the federal estate tax rate is zero —  thanks to the package of broad-based tax cuts that President Bush pushed  through to get the economy going earlier in the decade.
But as of midnight Dec. 31, the death tax returns — at a rate of 55%  on estates of $1 million or more. The effect this will have on hospital  life-support systems is already a matter of conjecture.
Resurrection of the death tax, however, isn't the only tax problem  that will be ushered in Jan. 1. Many other cuts from the Bush  administration are set to disappear and a new set of taxes will  materialize. And it's not just the rich who will pay.
The lowest bracket for the personal income tax, for instance, moves  up 50% — to 15% from 10%. The next lowest bracket — 25% — will rise to  28%, and the old 28% bracket will be 31%. At the higher end, the 33%  bracket is pushed to 36% and the 35% bracket becomes 39.6%.
But the damage doesn't stop there.
The marriage penalty also makes a comeback, and the capital gains tax  will jump 33% — to 20% from 15%. The tax on dividends will go all the  way from 15% to 39.6% — a 164% increase.
Both the cap-gains and dividend taxes will go up further in 2013 as  the health care reform adds a 3.8% Medicare levy for individuals making  more than $200,000 a year and joint filers making more than $250,000.  Other tax hikes include: halving the child tax credit to $500 from  $1,000 and fixing the standard deduction for couples at the same level  as it is for single filers.
Letting the Bush cuts expire will cost taxpayers $115 billion next  year alone, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and $2.6  trillion through 2020.
But even more tax headaches lie ahead. This "second wave" of hikes,  as Americans for Tax Reform puts it, are designed to pay for ObamaCare  and include:
The Medicine Cabinet Tax
The HSA Withdrawal Tax Hike. "This  provision of ObamaCare," according to ATR, "increases the additional tax  on nonmedical early withdrawals from an HSA from 10% to 20%,  disadvantaging them relative to IRAs and other tax-advantaged accounts,  which remain at 10%."
Brand Name Drug Tax. Makers and  importers of brand-name drugs will be liable for a tax of $2.5 billion  in 2011. The tax goes to $3 billion a year from 2012 to 2016, then $3.5  billion in 2017 and $4.2 billion in 2018. Beginning in 2019 it falls to  $2.8 billion and stays there. And who pays the new drug tax? Patients,  in the form of higher prices.
Economic Substance Doctrine. ATR reports  that "The IRS is now empowered to disallow perfectly legal tax  deductions and maneuvers merely because it judges that the deduction or  action lacks 'economic substance.'"
A third and final (for now) wave, says ATR, consists of the  alternative minimum tax's widening net, tax hikes on employers and the  loss of deductions for tuition:
• The Tax Policy Center, no right-wing group, says that the failure  to index the AMT will subject 28.5 million families to the tax when they  file next year, up from 4 million this year.
• "Small businesses can normally expense (rather than slowly deduct,  or 'depreciate') equipment purchases up to $250,000," says ATR. "This  will be cut all the way down to $25,000. Larger businesses can expense  half of their purchases of equipment. In January of 2011, all of it will  have to be 'depreciated.'"
• According to ATR, there are "literally scores of tax hikes on  business that will take place," plus the loss of some tax credits. The  research and experimentation tax credit will be the biggest loss, "but  there are many, many others. Combining high marginal tax rates with the  loss of this tax relief will cost jobs."
• The deduction for tuition and fees will no longer be available and  there will be limits placed on education tax credits. Teachers won't be  able to deduct their classroom expenses and employer-provided  educational aid will be restricted. Thousands of families will no longer  be allowed to deduct student loan interest.
Then there's the tax on Americans who decline to buy health care  insurance (the tax the administration initially said wasn't a tax but  now argues in court that it is) plus a 3.8% Medicare tax beginning in  2013 on profits made in real estate transactions by wealthier Americans.
Not all Americans may fully realize what's in store come Jan. 1. But  they should have a pretty good idea by the mid-term elections, and  members of Congress might take note of our latest IBD/TIPP Poll  (summarized above).
Fifty-one percent of respondents favored making the Bush cuts  permanent vs. 28% who didn't. Republicans were more than 4 to 1 and  Independents more than 2 to 1 in favor. Only Democrats were opposed, but  only by 40%-38%.
The cuts also proved popular among all income groups — despite the  Democrats' oft-heard assertion that Bush merely provided "tax breaks for  the wealthy." Fact is, Bush cut taxes for everyone who paid them, and  the cuts helped the nation recover from a recession and the worst  stock-market crash since 1929.
Maybe, just maybe, Americans remember that — and will not forget come Nov. 2.