“Gang of Six” plan to avoid
default would include ambitious tax reform package.
In the afternoon of July 19,
the “Gang of Six” deficit reduction plan aimed at avoiding a looming debt
default appeared to be gaining traction in Washington. The plan includes
substantial tax changes.
The President publicly
endorsed the “Gang of Six” plan's overall approach, Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-NV) offered it a qualified nod, Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) is
reported to have said the package could clear the Senate, and Senate Budget
Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND), one of the bipartisan “Gang of Six”
Senators, said the response he received from a number of his colleagues was
very favorable.
Broad tax changes
contemplated. The latest word about the plan is that it will shave $3.75
trillion off the deficit over ten years and will contain about $1.2 trillion in
new revenues.
An unofficial summary of the
bipartisan plan calls for the Senate Finance Committee within six months to
report a comprehensive tax reform package that delivers “real deficit savings
by broadening the tax base, lowering tax rates, and generating economic
growth.” Specifics of the tax changes covered in the unofficial summary
include:
A single corporate tax rate
between 23% and 29% and shift to a competitive territorial tax system.
Tax simplification that
involves reducing the number of tax expenditures (i.e., tax breaks) and
reducing individual tax rates. There would be three tax brackets with rates in
the range of 8%–12%, 14–22%, and 23%–29%. To the extent future Congresses find
that the dynamic effects of tax reform result in additional revenue beyond
initial targets, this revenue would go to additional rate reductions and
deficit reduction, not to new spending.
Permanent repeal of the
alternative minimum tax (AMT).
Reform, rather than
elimination, of tax breaks for health, charitable giving, homeownership, and
retirement.
Retention of the earned
income tax credit and child tax credit, or creation of an alternative that
would provide at least the same level of support for qualified beneficiaries.
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