USA TODAY US Edition

Report: Bipartisan deal outdoes original

‘Hundreds of billions of dollars’ would be added

- Maureen Groppe

WASHINGTON – The bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal that President Joe Biden embraced last week would add hundreds of billions of dollars to the economy by 2050, in contrast to the economic drag of his original proposal, according to a new analysis.

The difference is the corporate taxes that Biden proposed raising when he laid out his initial infrastruc­ture plan, which are not part of the bipartisan agreement.

Biden argued his proposal would create good jobs and strengthen the economy while making corporatio­ns pay their fair share.

But economists at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School calculated the higher taxes would decrease firms’ incentives to invest and disincenti­vize saving by households.

“That acts as a significan­t drag on savings in the economy. So with less savings over time, we have less productive private capital,” said Jon Huntley, a senior economist with the Penn Wharton Budget Model. “And less productive private capital means fewer computers and fewer trucks and fewer buildings, which makes workers less productive as well, which is reflected in lower wages and lower output.”

The result means the difference of hundreds of billions of dollars, according to the Wharton model.

The economy would be 0.8% smaller and wages 0.8% lower than they would otherwise be if the original Biden plan was passed into law, the team calculated in an April analysis.

Under the bipartisan agreement, by contrast, wages would 0.1% higher and the economy would be 0.1% larger, according to Wharton estimates released Wednesday.

“Even though it looks small, it really is a significan­t amount of money over the long term,” Huntley said.

The economic boost is despite the fact that Biden’s original proposal would decrease government debt by much more than the bipartisan deal would.

But Biden’s proposed tax increase, which included raising the corporate tax rate to 28% from 21%, were a no-go for Republican­s.

A group of moderate Republican and Democratic senators agreed on a smaller spending package, $1.2 trillion of which $579 billion is new spending.

Biden’s original plan was more than $2 trillion in new spending.

The bipartisan deal would be paid for through a variety of measures that include stricter tax enforcemen­t, repurposin­g unused pandemic relief funds, reducing fraud and overpaymen­ts in unemployme­nt benefits and through a variety of public-private partnershi­ps that typically rely on user fees such as tolls.

Biden pitched the plan during a visit to Wisconsin Tuesday.

“America has always been propelled into the future by landmark national investment­s,” Biden said.

“Investment­s that only the government has the capacity to make.”

Democrats still hope, however, to raise corporate taxes through separate legislatio­n that would include new spending left out of the bipartisan deal.

The administra­tion has favored other economists’ assessment­s of his proposals. Moody’s Analytics, for example, found limited impact from the proposed higher corporate taxes.

But assessment­s such as the one by the Wharton team could make it easier for moderates to push back on progressiv­es.

Both the bipartisan deal and the Democratic-only plans still have to be turned into legislatio­n.

Their cost will then be assessed by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Economists at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School calculated the higher taxes under the original infrastruc­ture plan would decrease firms’ incentives to invest and disincenti­vize saving by households.

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