Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Business: President Biden will propose almost doubling the capital gains tax rate for wealthy individual­s.

For $1 million earners in high-tax states such as California, it could be 56.7%.

-

President Joe Biden will propose almost doubling the capital gains tax rate for wealthy individual­s to 39.6% to help pay for a raft of social spending that addresses longstandi­ng inequality, according to people familiar with the proposal.

For those earning $1 million or more, the new top rate, coupled with an existing surtax on investment income, means that federal tax rates for wealthy investors could be as high as 43.4%. The new marginal 39.6% rate would be an increase from the current base rate of 20%, the people said on the condition of anonymity because the plan is not yet public.

A 3.8% tax on investment income that funds Obamacare would be kept in place, pushing the tax rate on returns on financial assets higher than rates on some wage and salary income, they said.

Stocks slid the most in more than a month on the news, with the S&P 500 Index falling 0.9% after climbing 0.2% earlier. Ten-year Treasury yields erased gains.

The proposal could reverse a long-standing provision of the tax code that taxes returns on investment lower than on labor. Biden campaigned on equalizing the capital gains and income tax rates for wealthy individual­s, saying it’s unfair that many of them pay lower rates than middle-class workers.

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki, asked about the capital-gains plan at a press briefing Thursday, said, “we’re still finalizing what the pay-fors look like.” Biden is expected to release the proposal next week as part of the tax increases to fund social spending in the forthcomin­g “American Families Plan.”

The administra­tion has discussed enhancing the estate tax for the wealthy. Biden has warned that those earning over $400,000 can expect to pay more in taxes. The White House has already rolled out plans for corporate tax hikes, which go to fund the $2.25 trillion infrastruc­ture-focused “American Jobs Plan.”

Republican­s have insisted on retaining the 2017 tax cuts implemente­d by former President Donald Trump, and argued the current capital-gains framework encourages saving and promotes future economic growth.

“It’s going to cut down on investment and cause unemployme­nt,” Chuck Grassley of Iowa, a top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee and former chair of that panel, said of the Biden capital-gains plan. He lauded the result of the 2017 tax cuts, and said, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

GOP lawmakers called for repurposin­g previously appropriat­ed, unused pandemic-relief funds to help pay for their counteroff­er infrastruc­ture plan. The group underlined opposition to tax hikes, other than a revamp of the levies that go toward highway funding in a way that would cover electric vehicles.

Biden will detail the American Families Plan in a joint address to Congress on April 28. It is set to include a wave of new spending on children and education, including a temporary extension of an expanded child tax credit that would give parents up to $300 a month for young children or $250 for those six and older.

The capital gains increase would raise $370 billion over a decade, according to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center based on Biden’s campaign platform.

For $1 million earners in California, it could be 56.7%. Democrats have said current capital gains rates help top earners who get their income through investment­s instead of from wages.

 ?? AL DRAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden speaks at the White House on Thursday. The next phase of Biden’s $4trillion push to overhaul the economy will raise taxes on millionair­e investors to fund education and other spending plans.
AL DRAGO — THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden speaks at the White House on Thursday. The next phase of Biden’s $4trillion push to overhaul the economy will raise taxes on millionair­e investors to fund education and other spending plans.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States