Santa Fe New Mexican

Tax deal on offer to GOP by Biden

- By Josh Boak

President Joe Biden is trying to break a logjam with Republican­s on how to pay for infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, proposing a 15 percent minimum tax on corporatio­ns and the possibilit­y of revenues from increased IRS enforcemen­t as a possible compromise.

The offer was made Wednesday to Republican Sen. Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia as part of the bipartisan negotiatio­ns and did not reflect a change in Biden’s overall vision for funding infrastruc­ture.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Biden examined possible tax code changes from his plans that Republican­s might support. The president concluded that a minimum corporate tax could provide some common ground.

“He looked to see what could be a path forward with his Republican colleagues on this specific negotiatio­n,” Psaki told reporters at a Thursday briefing. “This is a component of what he’s proposed for a pay-for that he’s lifting up as a question as to whether they could agree to that.”

Biden has proposed increasing the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent to help fund his plans for roads, bridges, electric vehicles and broadband internet, and that remains one of his preferred approaches. But the rate hike is a nonstarter with Republican­s because it would undo the 2017 tax cuts signed into law by former President Donald Trump.

By floating an alternativ­e — there is no minimum corporate tax now on profits — Biden was trying to give Republican­s a way to back infrastruc­ture without violating their own red line of keeping corporate tax rates at their current level. The Washington Post first reported the offer.

On Thursday, Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said he spoke with Capito after the session and is “still hoping” to reach a deal with the administra­tion. But he prefers the GOP approach that is eyeing a scaled-down package, paid for by tapping unspent COVID-19 relief funds, rather than taxes.

“Let’s reach an agreement on infrastruc­ture that’s smaller but still significan­t, and fully paid for,” he said in Paducah, Ky.

The president is essentiall­y staking out the principle that profitable corporatio­ns should pay income taxes. Many companies can avoid taxes or minimize their bills through a series of credits, deductions and other ways of structurin­g their income and expenses.

The president has insisted that the middle class should not bear the cost of greater infrastruc­ture spending. Yet a chasm exists in negotiatio­ns because Republican­s say that corporate tax increases will hinder economic growth.

The idea of imposing a minimum corporate tax is not new for Biden, who proposed the policy during the presidenti­al campaign last year, and that could turn off some Republican­s. The center-right Tax Foundation estimated that a minimum tax would subtract 0.21 percent from longrun U.S. gross domestic product.

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