Dayton Daily News

Democrats poised to raise taxes on the rich

- Jim Tankersley and Emily Cochrane

WASHINGTON — Democrats have spent the last several years clamoring to raise taxes on corporatio­ns and the rich, seeing that as a necessary anti- dote to widening economic inequality and a rebuke of former President Donald Trump’s signature tax cuts.

Now, under President Joe Biden, they have a shot at ushering in the largest federal tax increase since 1942. It could help pay for a host of spending programs that lib

economists predict would bolster the economy’s perfor- mance and repair a tax code that Democrats say encour- ages wealthy people to hoard assets and big companies to ship jobs and book profits overseas.

The question is whether congressio­nal Democrats and the White House can agree on how sharply taxes should rise and who, exactly, should pay the bill. They widely share the goal of reversing many of Trump’s tax cuts from 2017 and of making the wealthy and big businesses pay more. But they do not yet agree on the details — and because Repub- licans are unlikely to support their efforts, they have no room for error in a closely divided Senate.

For Biden, the need to find consensus is urgent. The president is set to travel to Pitts- burgh on Wednesday to unveil the next phase of his economic agenda: a sprawling collection of programs that would invest in infrastruc­ture, edu- cation, carbon-reduction and working mothers and cost $3 trillion to $4 trillion.

The package, which follows on the heels of Biden’s $1.9 trillion economic aid bill, is central to the president’s long-term plan to revitalize American workers and indus- try by funding bridges and roads, universal prekinderg­arten, emerging industries like advanced batteries, and efforts to invigorate the fight against climate change.

Biden plans to finance that spending, at least in part, with tax increases that could raise upward of $2.5 trillion in revenue if his plan hews closely to what he proposed in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign. Aides suggest his proposals might not be entirely paid for, with some one-time spending increases offset by increased federal borrowing.

“I think what you’re going to see is the administra­tion is going to put a pay-for on the table for at least some and maybe all of the infrastruc­ture plan,” said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. “If Team Biden makes a proposal, I’m sure we’ll make adjustment­s, but that’s a good way to start.”

Others in his party have pushed Biden to explore tax plans he did not campaign on, like taxing consumptio­n, wealth or vehicle miles traveled. Biden has stressed his broad-brush desire to increase the tax burden on wealthy Americans who largely earn their money through inheritanc­e or investment, to fund spending programs meant to help people who earn their money primarily through wages.

“I want to change the paradigm,” Biden said Thursday.

start to reward work, not just wealth.”

Democratic lawmakers have promised for decades to raise taxes on companies and the wealthy, a desire that kicked into overdrive after Trump signed a tax-cut package that delivered an outsize share of its benefits to corporatio­ns and high earners. But they have struggled to muster the votes for large tax increases since President Bill Clinton signed a 1993 law that included a variety of hikes intended to help reduce the budget deficit.

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