The Asian Age

Biden’s budget: Social spending, taxes on biz

-

Washington, May 29: President Joe Biden on Friday unveiled a $6 trillion budget for next year that’s piled high with new safety net programmes for the poor and middle class, but his generosity depends on taxing corporatio­ns and the wealthy to keep the nation’s spiking debt from spiralling totally out of control.

Biden inherited record pandemic-stoked spending and won a major victory on Covid-19 relief earlier this year. Friday’s rollout adds his recently announced infrastruc­ture and social spending initiative­s and fleshes out his earlier plans to sharply increase spending for annual Cabinet budgets.

This year’s projected deficit would set a new record of $3.7 trillion that would drop to $1.8 trillion next year still almost double pre-pandemic levels. The national debt will soon breach $30 trillion after more than $5 trillion in already approved Covid-19 relief.

As a result, the government must borrow roughly 50 cents of every dollar it spends this year and next. With the deficit largely unchecked, Biden would use proposed tax hikes on businesses and high-earning people to power huge new social programmes like universal prekinderg­arten, large subsidies for child care and guaranteed paid leave.

The best way to grow our economy is not from the top down, but from the bottom up and the middle out, Biden said in his budget message. Our prosperity comes from the people who get up every day, work hard, raise their family, pay their taxes, serve their Nation, and volunteer in their communitie­s.

The budget incorporat­es the administra­tion’s eightyear, $2.3 trillion infrastruc­ture proposal and its $1.8 trillion American Families Plan and adds details on his $1.5 trillion request for annual operating expenditur­es for the Pentagon and domestic agencies. Acting White House budget chief Shalanda Young said the Biden plan does exactly what the president told the country he would do. Grow the economy, create jobs and do so responsibl­y by requiring the wealthiest Americans and big corporatio­ns to pay their fair share.

Biden’s budget is sure to give Republican­s fresh ammunition for their criticisms of the new Democratic administra­tion as bent on a tax and spend agenda that would damage the economy and impose a crushing debt burden on younger Americans. Republican­s also say he’s shorting the military.

“It is insanely expensive. It dramatical­ly increases non-defence spending and taxes and would weaken the Pentagon,” said South Carolina Sen Lindsey Graham, top Republican on the Budget Committee and a generally pragmatic GOP voice on spending bills.

There will be serious discussion­s about government funding.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India