Boston Herald

CRITICS PAN BIDEN TAX PLAN

Corporate rate would rise; no hike for those making $400G or less

- By lisa kashinsky and Joe Dwinell

President Biden’s newly unveiled $2 trillion infrastruc­ture plan is already facing blowback from economic watchdogs who say the corporate tax hikes pitched to pay for years of pricey projects could end up costing jobs.

“Raising the corporate tax rate will inevitably have a negative effect on wages because a large chunk of the corporate tax rate is passed on to workers in reduction in wages and layoffs,” David Tuerck, president of the Beacon Hill Institute, told the Herald.

The Biden administra­tion unveiled a $2 trillion “American Jobs Plan” on Wednesday that sets out to rebuild and improve the nation’s crumbling infrastruc­ture, as well as pump billions of dollars toward climate resiliency, greener energy and broadband improvemen­ts over eight years.

Biden would pay for it all by increasing the corporate income tax rate to 28% — former President Donald Trump slashed it to 21% from 35% during his tenure — discouragi­ng “offshoring” by imposing a 21% global minimum tax and enacting a 15% minimum tax on large corporatio­ns’ income. It would take 15 years of higher taxes to pay for the projects.

The president said he was open to other funding suggestion­s — so long as no one earning less than $400,000 sees their taxes go up.

“This will create millions of jobs, good-paying jobs, will grow the economy, make us more competitiv­e around the world, promote our national security interests and put us in a position to win the global competitio­n with China in the upcoming years,” Biden said as he unveiled his plan in Pittsburgh.

But Trump slammed Biden’s plan as a “ludicrous” proposal that would do the opposite — “send thousands of factories, millions of jobs and trillions of dollars” to nations such as China.

“The Biden plan will crush American workers and decimate U.S. manufactur­ing, while giving special tax privileges to outsourcer­s, foreign and giant multinatio­nal corporatio­ns,” Trump said in a statement through his 45 Office website, adding that it “would be among the largest self-inflicted economic wounds in history.”

Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation think tank, estimates that raising the corporate tax rate to 28% would cut 159,000 jobs, reduce the GDP by nearly 1% and reduce wages for workers “across the income scale.”

Watson also said it would also make the U.S. “uncompetit­ive

with the rest of the industrial­ized world” and encourage corporatio­ns to move investment abroad.

“Corporate tax hikes harm workers, and lawmakers need to decide if this is the best move during a time where businesses are trying to bring back more people into the workforce,” Watson said.

 ?? GETTy imAgEs ?? BACK TO BASE: President Biden steps off Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews after returning Wednesday from Pittsburgh, where he detailed his $2 trillion plan to grow jobs, repair infrastruc­ture and raise corporate taxes.
GETTy imAgEs BACK TO BASE: President Biden steps off Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews after returning Wednesday from Pittsburgh, where he detailed his $2 trillion plan to grow jobs, repair infrastruc­ture and raise corporate taxes.

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