
U.S.
Treasury Department Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 21, 2010
CONTACT: Treasury Public Affairs
(202) 622-2960
TREASURY RELEASES NEW GUIDANCE FOR TAX CREDIT IN AFFORDABLE CARE ACT TO
SUPPORT GROUNDBREAKING BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
Under the Affordable Care Act, Therapeutic Discovery Credit Will Support
Research with Significant Potential to Produce New Therapies, Create
High-Quality Jobs
WASHINGTON
– The U.S.
Department of the Treasury today announced the guidelines for applying
for the new Therapeutic Discovery Project Program created by the
Affordable Care Act. The program will provide tax credits and grants to
small firms that show significant potential to produce new and
cost-saving therapies, support good jobs and increase U.S.
competitiveness.
“This new tax credit will help advance
research to find life-saving treatments and help U.S. companies lead
the way in innovative medical discoveries,” said Secretary Tim Geithner.
The therapeutic discovery tax credit is targeted to projects that show
significant potential to produce new therapies, address unmet medical
needs, reduce the long-term growth of health care costs and advance the
goal of curing cancer within the next 30 years. The credit’s allocation
will also take into consideration which projects show the greatest
potential to create and sustain high-quality, high-paying jobs in the
United States and to advance our competitiveness in the fields of life,
biological, and medical sciences. Today, the biotechnology industry
employs 1.3 million workers, and the industry continues to be a key
growth engine for our economy.
The credit covers up to 50 percent of the cost of qualifying biomedical
research, up to a maximum credit of $5 million per firm and $1 billion
overall and is only available to firms with fewer than 250 employees.
To provide an immediate boost to U.S. biomedical research and the small
businesses that conduct it, the credit is effective for investments made
in 2009 and 2010. Firms can opt to receive a grant instead of a tax
credit, so start-ups that are not yet profitable can benefit as well.
The guidance released today by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
describes the process by which firms can apply to have their research
projects certified as eligible for the credit. Companies may submit
applications for certification beginning June 21, 2010, and applications
must be postmarked no later than July 21, 2010. As part of the review
process for research projects, the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) will evaluate each project for its potential to produce
new therapies or reduce health care costs. Only projects that show a
reasonable potential to meet these goals will be certified as eligible
for the credit. The IRS will issue certifications by the end of October
based on the determinations made by HHS.
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