The Boston Globe

Biden’s budget at odds with GOP’s aims

$7.3t plan stands almost no chance in the House

- By Jim Tankersley

WASHINGTON — President Biden on Monday proposed a $7.3 trillion budget packed with tax increases on corporatio­ns and high earners, new spending on social programs, and a wide range of efforts to combat high consumer costs, including for housing and college tuition.

The proposal includes only relatively small changes from the budget plan Biden submitted last year, which went nowhere in Congress. However, it reiterates his call for lawmakers to spend about $100 billion to strengthen border security and deliver aid to Israel and Ukraine.

Most of the new spending and tax increases included in the fiscal year 2025 budget again stand almost no chance of becoming law this year, given that Republican­s control the House and roundly oppose Biden’s economic agenda. Last week, House Republican­s passed a budget proposal outlining their priorities, which are far afield from what Democrats have sought.

Instead, the document will serve as a draft of Biden’s policy platform as he seeks reelection in November, along with a series of contrasts intended to draw a distinctio­n with his presumptiv­e Republican opponent, former president Trump.

Biden has sought to reclaim strength on economic issues with voters who have given him low marks amid elevated inflation. This budget aims to portray him as a champion of increased government aid for workers, parents, manufactur­ers, retirees, and students, as well as the fight against climate change.

Speaking in New Hampshire on Monday, Biden heralded the budget as a way to raise revenue to pay for his priorities by raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans and big corporatio­ns.

“I’m not anti-corporatio­n,” he said. “I’m a capitalist, man. Make all the money you want. Just begin to pay your fair share in taxes.”

The budget proposes about $5 trillion in new taxes on corporatio­ns and the wealthy over a decade. Administra­tion officials said Monday that those increases would be split equally between corporatio­ns and the nation’s highest earners and that Americans earning less than $400,000 a year would enjoy tax cuts totaling $750 billion under their plans.

Speaker Mike Johnson and other members of House Republican leadership criticized Biden in a statement released Monday afternoon. “The price tag of President Biden’s proposed budget is yet another glaring reminder of this administra­tion’s insatiable appetite for reckless spending and the Democrats’ disregard for fiscal responsibi­lity,” they said.

Polls have found that Americans are dissatisfi­ed with Biden’s handling of the economy and favor Trump’s approach to economic issues. But the president has been unwavering in his core economic policy strategy, and the budget shows that he is not deviating from that plan.

Biden’s budget proposes about $3 trillion in new measures to reduce the federal deficit over the next decade. That is in line with his budget proposal last year, which sought to narrow deficits by raising taxes on businesses and the rich and by allowing the government to bargain more aggressive­ly with pharmaceut­ical companies to reduce spending on prescripti­on drugs.

The budget again calls for raising the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent, the level Trump set in the tax bill he signed in late 2017. It increases a new minimum tax on large corporatio­ns and quadruples a tax on stock buybacks, among other efforts to raise more revenue from companies and individual­s who make more than $400,000 a year.

Those savings would build on discretion­ary spending limits that Biden and congressio­nal Republican­s agreed on last year to resolve a standoff over raising the nation’s borrowing limit. They still would leave the nation with historical­ly high budget deficits: about $1.6 trillion a year on average over the next decade, according to administra­tion forecasts. As a share of the economy, deficits would decline in that time — but total government debt as a share of the economy would tick upward.

House Republican­s released a budget last week that seeks to reduce deficits much faster — balancing the budget by the end of the decade. Their savings relied on economic growth forecasts that are well above mainstream forecaster­s’ expectatio­ns, along with steep and often unspecifie­d spending cuts.

The nonpartisa­n Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget called the Republican plan “unrealisti­c in its assumption­s and outcomes.” On Monday, the group called Biden’s proposed deficit reduction “a welcome start, but a too timid one.”

Biden and his aides have repeatedly said they believed the projected deficits in his budgets would not hurt the economy.

In one key area, Biden’s proposal punts on key details: what to do about the provisions of the 2017 Republican tax law, including tax cuts for individual­s, that expire in 2025. The budget calls that expiration, which was written into the law in order to hold down its estimated cost, “fiscally reckless.”

The president’s plan seeks tax increases on corporatio­ns and new social program funding.

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