Tuesday, May 7, 2024

Biden pledge to tax wealthy and companies revived

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Washington, D.C. – A campaign trail promise of President Joe Biden to increase taxes on corporations and the wealthy as part of a battle against glaring income inequality in the United States got an unexpected boost on Wednesday.

Early proposals to increase tax rates from Biden and his fellow Democrats hit a brick wall in Congress after Republicans, and some Democrats, opposed them.

But a sudden reversal by West Virginia Democratic senator Joe Manchin, a swing vote in the divided Senate, has given Biden’s tax agenda a new lease on life.

The amount that U.S. companies contribute to tax revenue that funds roads and schools has plummeted since the 1940s.

Biden has often said in office that companies should instead pay a “fair share”, a contrast to deference to private markets started by Republicans with Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980, and buoyed by rounds of tax cuts and deregulation, by both parties.

The new compromise bill includes U.S. $430 billion in new spending on energy, electric vehicle tax credits and health insurance investments.

It more than pays for itself by raising minimum taxes for big companies and enforcing existing tax laws, Manchin and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement.

The bill would impose a 15 per cent minimum tax on corporations with profits over U.S. $1 billion, raising U.S. $313 billion over a decade, they wrote.

Companies could claim net operating losses and tax credits against the 15 per cent.

The U.S. corporate tax rate dropped to 21 per cent from 35 per cent after a 2017 tax cut pushed by then-President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans, but many companies pay much less than that, and some of the largest pay no federal taxes, research groups including the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy have found.

Biden proposed raising that rate to 28 per cent last year, as part of an infrastructure spending bill, but the tax component was struck from the bill.

The new Manchin-Schumer bill also aims to close the so-called carried interest loophole, long a goal of Democrats.

Carried interest refers to a long-standing Wall Street tax break that let many private equity and hedge fund financiers pay the lower capital gains tax rate on much of their income, instead of the higher income tax rate paid by wage-earners.

Eliminating the loophole would raise U.S. $14 billion, the senators say.

Schumer said he expected the Senate to vote on the legislation next week, to “lower prescription drug prices, tackle the climate crisis with urgency and vigor, ensure the wealthiest corporations and individuals pay their fair share in taxes, and reduce the deficit”.

The Manchin-Schumer measure is substantially smaller than the multi-trillion-dollar spending bill Democrats had envisioned last year.

But it still represents a major advance for Biden’s policy agenda ahead of mid-term elections on November 8 that could determine whether Democrats retain control of Congress.

It came just as Biden celebrated Senate passage of a bill aimed at boosting the U.S. semi-conductor industry, another key priority of his administration, and as he struggles with low job approval ratings and ebbing support from his own party after a series of conservative Supreme Court rulings.

(Reuters)

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