Times-Call (Longmont)

Bloomberg Opinion on how the bipartisan tax deal is good but not good enough:

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After months of talks, lawmakers have reached a bipartisan agreement on changes to the tax code. They’re now struggling to get it passed in time for the new tax-filing season. The plan is good as far as it goes and legislator­s should get behind it — so long as they commit to addressing its biggest flaw.

The deal combines an expansion of the child tax credit sought by Democrats with cuts in corporate taxes favored by most Republican­s. The net fiscal cost is reckoned to be around $80 billion through 2025 — which would be covered, negotiator­s say, by bringing forward closure of the fraud-prone employee retention credit that was adopted during the pandemic. The child tax credit expansion would lift some 400,000 children out of poverty; the corporate tax relief would promote investment and raise output and incomes; and, thanks to the employee retention credit’s demise, the plan would be revenue-neutral, even without counting the fiscal benefits of faster growth. So what’s not to like?

Some Democrats are unhappy that the child tax credit’s expansion falls far short of restoring the benefits provided in the 2021 American Rescue Plan. That pandemic-relief measure gave families credits of $3,000 per child ... and made them “fully refundable” — meaning families with no earnings or tax liability were paid the full amount . ...

Many Republican­s object to

... the child tax credit’s “refundabil­ity,” arguing that a tax refund to families whose incomes are so low they wouldn’t pay tax anyway is actually a welfare payment. They have a point — but whatever you call such payments, they’ve been shown to reduce child poverty and the social costs that go with it . ...

The parties also disagree, as you’d expect, on the merits of corporate tax relief . ...

Predictabl­y, neither side has much to say about the plan’s biggest shortcomin­g — namely, that it ignores the country’s looming fiscal challenges and deploys the usual budget gimmickry to make its case . ...

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