Chattanooga Times Free Press

UPS against Biden corporate tax hike

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UPS is opposing a proposed hike in corporate tax rates to pay for President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture plan.

Biden last week outlined a

$2.3 trillion plan to build up the nation’s infrastruc­ture over the next eight years, for everything from roads, bridges, public transit and electric vehicle charging stations, to upgrading sewers, broadband Internet and the power grid. To help pay for it, Biden proposed increasing the U.S. corporate tax rate to 28% from 21%. The tax rate on corporate profits was cut to 21% from 35% through the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2017 under then-President Donald Trump.

UPS issued a statement saying it “applauds President Biden for prioritizi­ng infrastruc­ture funding, specifical­ly efforts that will make the nation’s roads, highways and bridges safer for our essential workers and the communitie­s we serve.”

But the package delivery giant urged the use of a “user pay” model such as an increase in federal fuel taxes, and said it supports the launch of a pilot program for a tax based on vehicle miles traveled.

“Funding and investing in our nation’s transporta­tion infrastruc­ture is essential to remaining competitiv­e in today’s global economy and UPS believes it should pay its fair share, but does not support increasing corporate tax rates to pay for what should be a dedicated infrastruc­ture funding source,” the company said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has also voiced opposition to a corporate tax rate increase. It said Wednesday that while there is “a great need” to invest in American infrastruc­ture, “that doesn’t mean we should proceed with tax hikes that will hurt American businesses and cost American jobs.”

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