Many fund managers would pay regular income tax on carried interest, not the lower tax rate for investment gains. The bill also adds yearly reporting and anti-abuse rules for partnerships.
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Ending the Carried Interest Loophole Act is a Senate bill in Congress.
Who this affects: This bill mainly affects people who get partnership profit shares for managing investment money. It matters most for managers in private equity, hedge funds, venture capital, and similar fund businesses. Partnerships that issue these interests would also face new reporting duties. Most ordinary taxpayers would not be directly affected unless they hold or receive one of these interests.
Why this matters: This bill matters because it changes how some high-income fund pay is taxed. It would move more carried interest into ordinary income, which is often taxed at higher rates than capital gains. The bill could raise federal revenue, though the exact amount is not stated here. It could also make fund tax planning more complex because the new system uses yearly formulas, loan rules, reporting duties, and future Treasury regulations.
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