New York Post

SALT IN A $2T SHAKER

Tax relief in doubt

- By LYDIA MOYNIHAN

Hopes to lift the cap on socalled SALT deductions for taxpayers in high-tax states like New York are growing bleaker as President Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill gets cut down to size, sources told The Post.

Biden’s massive spending package, initially pegged at $3.5 trillion, is being whittled to roughly $2 trillion. That, in turn, is shrinking the likelihood that blue states will see their federal deductions on state and local taxes — popularly known as SALT — restored after the Trump administra­tion capped them in 2017, according to Beltway insiders.

“Given how much the overall reconcilia­tion package has to be cut down … it

will be hard to get SALT relief anywhere near the levels that consensus believes,” Charles Myers of Signum Global told The Post. “It’s hard to give people a tax break when you’re trying to raise taxes overall.”

President Trump’s 2017 tax reform plan, which imposed a $10,000 cap on SALT deductions, was a stick in the eye for taxpayers in high-tax blue states like New York, New Jersey and California.

The caps have taken some of the blame for a recent exodus of wealthy New Yorkers to lower-tax states like Florida and Texas. Last year, the repeal of SALT deductions brought in $77 billion in revenue.

Even before Biden’s bill was being trimmed, SALT deductions faced an uphill battle. While the budget can pass without Republican votes, Democrats need support from nearly all members of the House and every Democratic senator.

That’s a problem, as progressiv­e Democrats have long been opposed to SALT deductions. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) previously made headlines for calling SALT relief “a gift to the billionair­es.” But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY, inset) begs to differ, recently saying “the SALT deduction helps everyday New Yorkers now faced with unfair double taxation.”

Some consultant­s are taking the long view. “Even though people in blue states want senators pushing for a two-year repeal of SALT deduction, [the caps] will expire after 2025 anyway,” managing director Adam Benson of Alvarez & Marsal said.

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