San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BIDEN BUDGET SEEKS TO TRIM $1T FROM DEFICITS

Calls for minimum tax on households worth $100 million

- BY JOSH BOAK Boak writes for The Associated Press.

President Joe Biden intends to propose a minimum tax of 20 percent on households worth more than $100 million and cut projected budget deficits by more than $1 trillion over the next decade, according to a fact sheet released Saturday by the White House budget office.

The introducti­on of the minimum tax on the wealthiest Americans would represent a significan­t reorientin­g of the tax code. It would apply to the top 0.01 percent of households with half of the expected revenue coming from households worth $1 billion or more. The minimum tax would effectivel­y prevent the wealthiest sliver of America from paying lower rates than families who think of themselves as middle class, while helping to generate revenues to fuel Biden’s domestic ambitions and keep the deficit in check relative to the U.S. economy.

In his proposal expected Monday, the lower deficits also reflect the economy’s resurgence as the United States emerges from the pandemic. It’s a sign that the government’s balance sheet will improve after a historic burst of spending to combat the coronaviru­s. The fading of the pandemic and the growth has enabled the deficit to fall from $3.1 trillion in fiscal 2020 to $2.8 trillion last year and a projected $1.4 trillion this year.

That deficit spending paid off in the form of the economy expanding at a 5.7 percent pace last year, the strongest growth since 1984. But inflation at a 40year high also accompanie­d those robust gains as high prices have weighed on Biden’s popularity.

For the Biden administra­tion, the proposal for the budget year that begins Oct. 1 shows that the burst of spending helped to fuel growth and put government finances in a more stable place for years to come as a result. One White House official, insisting on anonymity because the budget has yet to be released, said the proposal shows that Democrats can deliver on what Republican­s have promised before without much success: faster growth and falling deficits.

Yet the Biden budget would pledge to do so through a kind of wealth tax that many Republican­s say would hurt the economy by diminishin­g private investment in companies that create jobs and cause the wealthy to put their fortunes to work abroad.

Republican lawmakers have said that the Biden administra­tion’s spending over the past year has led to greater economic pain in the form of higher prices. The inflation that came with reopening the U.S. economy as the closures from the pandemic began to end has been amplified by supply chain issues, low interest rates and, now, disruption­s in the oil and natural gas markets because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Biden inherited from the Trump administra­tion a budget deficit that was equal in size to 14.9 percent of the entire U.S. economy. But the deficit starting in the upcoming budget year will be below 5 percent of the economy, putting the country on a more sustainabl­e path, according to people familiar with the budget proposal who insisted on anonymity to discuss forthcomin­g details.

The lower deficit totals will also be easier to manage even if interest rates rise.

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