Plus - Biden's next big spending plan  [The Fisc](   By Michael Rainey Bidenâs Next Major Spending Proposal Taking Shape
The White House is expected to release its next major spending proposal, called the American Families Plan, before President Joe Bidenâs address to Congress on April 28. Following up on Bidenâs $2.3 trillion infrastructure proposal, the second phase of Bidenâs Build Back Better program is expected to contain upwards of $1 trillion in spending and $500 billion in tax credits, much of it targeting social needs such as education, child care and paid family leave, according to [The Washington Postâs]( Jeff Stein and Tyler Pager. Stein [said]( Tuesday that the spending could break down roughly like this: - $400 billion to extend the expanded child credit through 2025,
- $225 billion for child care,
- $225 billion for paid family leave,
- $200 billion for universal pre-K,
- $200 billion to $300 billion for education, including free community college. Funding for the proposal is expected to come from tax increases on wealthy households and investors. Biden may also cite stricter enforcement of the tax code by the IRS as another source of funding. The bottom line: The second phase of Bidenâs proposed spending on public goods focuses on social capital, adding an additional â and for some, a controversial â dimension to his plan to invest heavily in American infrastructure. Passing the second phase wonât be any easier than the first, though, and could prove to be more difficult, given Republican opposition to most of the spending in the plan. Expect to see elements of both proposals in play in the coming weeks as lawmakers try to work out a deal. How Hard Would It Be to Fix the IRS?
President Biden is counting on a reinvigorated IRS to help fund some of his more ambitious spending plans, but [The Wall Street Journalâs Richard Rubin]( says Tuesday that revitalizing the agency may be more challenging than some policymakers expect. Thereâs little doubt that the IRS needs help. The agency has lost about 15% of its workforce over the last decade, making it harder to provide services to taxpayers, and the percentage of taxpayers being audited recently fell to a 40-year low. As a result, the value of missed tax collections has soared, and Commissioner Charles Rettig said last week that the underpayment of taxes may come to $1 trillion each year. Lawmakers have eased a long-term decline in funding recently, providing a modest boost to the agency in the past few years. But Rubin says that additional funding may not be enough. âA turnaround takes more than money,â Rubin writes. âIt is a management challenge as complex as the IRS itself. The agency is a collections company, police force, law firm, financial institution, call center and high-security information-technology shop rolled into one. It operates with political constraints no private company faces, such as budgets that fluctuate with election results and pushback from influential businesses large and small when it ramps up enforcement.â IRS advocates say that the key to restoring the agency is straightforward: it needs a lot more well-trained people, especially those who can investigate complex partnerships and elaborate tax avoidance schemes. But it takes time to develop those skills. âIf we get fundingâletâs say tomorrow or next yearâfor a lot of revenue agents that would be fantastic,â Deputy Commissioner Sunita Lough told Rubin, âbut the results take a long time.â Former IRS commissioner Charles Rossotti said he would wait to see how the revival effort plays out. âIf I hadnât lived in Washington for 50 years, I would say, âWow, this is the moment, definitely,ââ he told Rubin. However, given his experience, âIâm a little more cautious,â he said. Chart of the Day: Getting SALTy
A group of lawmakers led by New York-area Democrats has [vowed]( to hold up President Bidenâs infrastructure plan unless it includes a repeal of the cap on the state and local tax deduction. Imposed by the 2017 GOP tax bill, the cap hits residents of high-cost, high-tax communities particularly hard, and representatives from those areas are making it a priority to restore the deductions that can be worth thousands of dollars per household. The problem is that the SALT cap is pretty popular with policymakers from both sides of the aisle. Republicans like it because it seems to target Democratic areas, making it more expensive to follow the high-tax, good-service model of providing public goods. Some liberals, on the other hand, like the cap because itâs progressive, forcing high-income households to pay more in federal income taxes. And eliminating the cap would be regressive, with most of the benefits flowing to those high-income households. This chart from the [Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy]( shows just how regressive the elimination of the SALT cap would be: In the four states whose representatives dominate the anti-SALT cap caucus in Congress, âmore than half the benefit of SALT cap repeal would flow to white households with annual incomes above $200,000. This is a group that accounts for less than 1 in 10 households in each of these states.â Quote of the Day
âEver since Iâve been in office, weâve been robbing Peter to pay Paul. This is the first time we wonât have to do that. Weâll be able to make some investments.â -- Tishaura Jones, Democratic mayor of St. Louis, telling [The Washington Post]( about her plans for the $500 million in aid the city will receive from the federal government as part of the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan. State and local governments are slated to receive $350 billion as a result of the legislation, with about a third of that headed to the local level. Signs of Progress on Global Minimum Tax
The Biden administration has proposed a global minimum tax rate of 21% for multinational corporations but needs other counties to agree in order to make the system work. On Monday, Hans Vijlbrief, a deputy finance minister in the Netherlands, told [Bloomberg]( that he was optimistic that an agreement can be made, potentially marking a significant turning point in the battle against corporate tax evasion. âWhen the Americans initiate such a proposal and get backing from big countries like Germany and France, it would be surprising if a deal isnât reached,â Vijlbrief said. âTax competition is becoming something of the past.â The deputy ministerâs comments are particularly noteworthy because of the role the Netherlands plays in the global tax avoidance system. According to the Tax Justice Network, the Netherlands is the fourth largest tax haven in the world, behind only the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands and Bermuda, and figures prominently in tax schemes deployed by some of the largest multinationals. Vijlbrief said a deal could be reached by July, though many of the details need to be worked out. However long it takes, though, the interest in fostering tax evasion seems to be waning. âIf you ask me, this is not the business climate you want to pursue,â Vijlbrief said. âIt damages the tax climate and political morals in a country. If you want people to pay their taxes, big companies must do so too.â Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. Follow us on Twitter: [@yuvalrosenberg]( [@mdrainey]( and [@TheFiscalTimes](. And please tell your friends they can [sign up here]( for their own copy of this newsletter. News - [Biden Asks Republicans to Offer Their Proposal on Infrastructure by Next Month]( â Washington Post
- [GOP Senators Float $600-800 Billion Infrastructure Counteroffer]( â Politico
- [How Politics Is Shaping Bidenâs Infrastructure Proposal]( â Washington Post
- [SALT Cap Revolt Led by N.Y. Democrats Snarls Biden Spending Plan]( â Bloomberg
- [As COVID Relief Money Floods In, Pandemic-Battered Cities See a Chance to Transform]( â Washington Post
- [Cornyn Places Hold on Biden Medicaid Nominee]( â The Hill
- [Elizabeth Warren Invites Billionaire Critic Leon Cooperman to Testify at Senate Hearing on Taxes]( â CNBC
- [Biden Wants to Crack Down on Corporate Tax Loopholes, Resuming a Battle His Predecessors Lost]( â Washington Post
- [Bidenâs Big Agenda Relies on a Shrunken, Strained Agency: The IRS]( â Wall Street Journal
- [Biden Administration Extends Universal Free School Lunch Through 2022]( â The Hill
- [Unemployment Benefits Cut Short for More Than 300,000 During Pandemic, Study Says]( â CNBC
- [After a Disrupted Census, Congress Tries Again to Extend Deadlines for Results]( â NPR News
- [âIâm Still a Zeroâ: Vaccine-Resistant Republicans Warn That Their Skepticism Is Worsening]( â Washington Post Views and Analysis - [Will the GOP Rift with Big Business Lead to Higher Corporate Taxes?]( â Howard Gleckman, Tax Policy Center
- [Bidenâs Next Big Plan Could Blow up One of the GOPâs Worst Lies]( â Greg Sargent, Washington Post
- [Lawmakers Are Trying to Scale Back Bidenâs Infrastructure Plan. Why?]( â Jennifer Rubin, Washington Post
- [Whatâs the Secret of Bidenâs Success?]( â Paul Krugman, New York Times
- [Too Many IRS Audits of Big Businesses Result In No Change in Tax Liability]( â Janet Holtzblatt, Tax Policy Center
- [The Big Difference Between a Green New Deal and Bidenâs Climate Agenda]( â Kate Aranoff, New Republic
- [Tax Expenditures Remain A Significant Share of The Economy]( â Eric Toder, Tax Policy Center
- [Markets Haven't Priced in Biden's Tax Hikes Yet]( â John Authers, Bloomberg
- [The Case for Green Consumer Taxes]( â Mark Cliffe, Project Syndicate
- [Trump Blazed a Trail That Clears the Way for Biden]( â Noah Smith, Bloomberg Copyright © 2020 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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