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Biden proposes 15% corporate minimum tax to win Republican backing of infrastructure plan

Published 06/03/2021, 11:28 AM
Updated 06/03/2021, 07:41 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on the administration's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) response in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building's South Court Auditorium at the White House in Washington, U.S., June 2, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos

By David Shepardson and Jarrett Renshaw

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden offered to scrap his proposed corporate tax hike during negotiations with Republicans, two sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday, in what would be a major concession by the Democratic president as he works to hammer out an infrastructure deal.

Biden offered to drop plans to raise corporate tax rates as high as 28% and instead set a minimum 15% tax rate aimed at ensuring all companies pay taxes, sources said.

In return, Republicans would have to agree to at least $1 trillion in new infrastructure spending, one source said. And Biden has not given up on seeking as much as $1.7 trillion.

With the change, funding for the plan would lean heavily on increased tax enforcement, scrapping inheritance tax breaks for wealthy families as well as other sources like $75 billion in unspent COVID-19 relief funds, one source said.

Biden’s 15% tax floor seeks to stop large, multinational companies like Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) from paying little to no U.S. taxes. Currently many of these companies show large profits on earning statements but shift their liability to more tax-friendly countries.

White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Biden's proposal "should be completely acceptable" to Republicans that want to leave 2017 corporate tax cuts in place, she said. "We're open to other options," Psaki said, as long as they do not hike taxes on people making less than $400,000.

The Biden alternative assumes $1.7 trillion in revenues over 15 years to pay for new spending over eight years.

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The funds would include $700 billion from stepped-up enforcement of existing taxes, $200 billion from ending a capital gains tax break on large inheritances and $75 billion in unspent COVID-19 funds. The remainder would come from other proposals including ending certain fossil fuel subsidies, a new fee on commercial truck mileage and the 15% minimum corporate tax.

Biden's initial plan called for $2.25 trillion in infrastructure spending and new revenue, including $857.8 billion from the prior proposal to raise corporate income tax from 21% to 28%.

"He is personally leaning in, willing to compromise, spending time with senators - Democrat and Republican - to find out what is the art of the possible," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told CNN in an interview on Thursday.

"The only thing he won't accept is inaction," she said. "It has to be big and bold, $1 trillion or more."

Biden has a previously scheduled meeting with Republican Senator Shelley Moore Capito, the party's main negotiator on infrastructure, on Friday.

At an appearance in Kentucky, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said, "We're still hoping that we can come to an agreement on a fully paid for and a significant infrastructure package."

He added that the discussions are focused on "maybe $1 trillion.” "I don't know whether we're going to reach an agreement or not," he said.

Latest comments

No doubt, he has a small thingy.
How about putting your foot down very hard on all the corporations overcharging the people all day long, and repeal the law that allows them to legally overcharge customers up to 4% each and every year? It adds up to many hundreds of billions legally stolen from consumers!!!And, while your at that, consider putting some restraints on executive bonuses, by tying them to real revenue & earnings, instead of stock price targets? That way, millions of people won't lose their money to pump & dump hustlers.
So when companies move to china or India should we blame them for "stealing" our jobs?
All we have to do is stop buying cheap import products filling up our landfills.
garbage president
Its funny that a comment here thinks negotiation is like a car sale, unprofessional. Maybe he has been to college and never learnt a key business topic: communication and negotiation. Or he’s just another Trump supporter, despiting respect toward people woth different views, unable to work or function when thing are not as they expected.
you seem not to have attended high school, or at least it didn't do a good job educating you in grammar and spelling.
learned, not learnt
i Lernt dat n mi skool
When I see that the amount negotiated in taxes and expenditures are negotiated down like a car sale, it loses all professionalism. Sounds that the allocation will be the same, just eyeballing for votes. Slowly start in the same path like Obama.
raising taxes now is just a bad idea. raising the corporate tax is a bad idea ever. closing loopholes, i kind of like. spending $1trillion on "infrastructure" is a bad idea if we haven't done an analysis on what actually needs to be funded. Lord knows, it'll just go to highways and clog up the roads.
just undo the 2017 corporate tax cut and move on. waste of time and money.
Depends on what is being called infrasteucture. Roads, trains, bridges, shipping ports or we talking social programs like childcare.
Biden’s group are partially reversing their tax position in order to push through their social spending (which they keep insisting on calling infrastructure).
Expect actual infrastructure to keep falling apart. Biden/Obama promised to fix actual infrastructure to.
Sweet.Now this is the real 'Art of the deal', tweeting all day from mar-a-lago bragging doesn't maketh one.
You have a point. Biden’s doing much better than Obama ever could. He just kept using the excuse that the other side wouldn’t comprimise whenever he didn’t get his way.
Works for me
Republicans last one was like 928B? so add 82B. boom
72*
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