Biden’s tax overhaul

Biden’s tax overhaul

The president wants corporations and the wealthiest Americans to fund his spending plan

President Joe Biden’s plan to revamp U.S. infrastructure and expand the social safety net would raise federal spending to its highest level in modern history. Democrats want to pay for the $4 trillion package over the next 10 years by hiking taxes on the ultra-wealthy and corporations. Republicans say any tax increase is a “red line” they will not cross. Here is what the plan, which Congress must approve, currently includes:

$4 trillion in spending

The plan calls for spending $2.3 trillion on infrastructure and jobs and another $1.8 trillion on families and education.

American Jobs Plan

$2.3T

Areas cut or altered in $1.7T plan

Broadband

Manufacturing

Clean drinking water

Housing

Community infrastructure

$689B

Workforce development

$580B

Schools & VA Hospitals

Electric

Workforce development

Modernizing public transit

Rail service

Electrifying vehicles

Transportation

$621B

Elder care

Ports

Other

$400B

Bridge and road repair

Redress historic inequities

American Families Plan

$1.8T

Free universal Pre-K

Education

$500B

Pell grants

Two years free community college

Tax cuts and credits

$800B

Expanded ACA tax credit

HBCU investment

Paid leave

Childcare

Nutrition

$42B

Children and families

$450B

Unemployment insurance

$2B

American Jobs Plan

$2.3T

Areas cut or altered in $1.7T plan

Broadband

Manufacturing

Clean drinking water

Housing

Community infrastructure

$689B

Workforce development

$580B

Schools & VA Hospitals

Electric

Workforce development

Modernizing public transit

Rail service

Electrifying vehicles

Transportation

$621B

Elder care

Ports

Other

$400B

Bridge and road repair

Redress historic inequities

American Families Plan

$1.8T

Free universal Pre-K

Education

$500B

Pell grants

Two years free community college

Tax cuts and credits

$800B

Expanded ACA tax credit

HBCU investment

Paid leave

Childcare

Nutrition

$42B

Children and families

$450B

Unemployment insurance

$2B

American Jobs Plan

American Families Plan

$2.3T

$1.8T

Areas cut or altered in $1.7T plan

Broadband

Manufacturing

Clean drinking water

Free universal Pre-K

Housing

Education

$500B

Community infrastructure

$689B

Workforce development

$580B

Pell grants

Two years free community college

Tax cuts and credits

Schools & VA Hospitals

Electric

$800B

Workforce development

Modernizing public transit

Rail service

Electrifying vehicles

Expanded ACA tax credit

HBCU investment

Transportation

$621B

Paid leave

Childcare

Elder care

Ports

Other

Nutrition

$400B

$42B

Bridge and road repair

Children and families

$450B

Redress historic inequities

Unemployment insurance

$2B

American Jobs Plan

$2.3T

Areas cut or altered in $1.7T plan

Manufacturing

Broadband

Housing

Community infrastructure

$689B

Workforce development

$580B

Electric

Workforce development

Electrifying vehicles

Rail service

Transportation

$621B

Elder care

Other

$400B

Bridge and road repair

American Families Plan

$1.8T

Free universal Pre-K

Education

$500B

Pell grants

Tax cuts and credits

$800B

Expanded ACA tax credit

Paid leave

Childcare

Nutrition

$42B

Children and families

$450B

Unemployment insurance

$2B

Source: The Biden administration

To Republicans, infrastructure means roads, bridges and construction projects. But Democrats want to expand the definition to include broadband internet for farmers, electric vehicles and cleaning up pollution in low-income neighborhoods.

There is even less Republican support for the trillions of dollars Democrats want to spend on families to reduce child poverty and help adults find jobs in a changing economy.

A plan to pay for the plan

Taxing the top 1%

Biden’s proposal comes at a time when corporations and the richest individuals pay less than at almost any other time in modern history.

Biden proposes to raise income tax rates for the top 1% of earners, those making over $500,000 a year. The top rate would rise to 39.6%, undoing a cut to 37% approved under the Trump administration.

The wealthy would not pay the top rate on all their income. The federal government divides taxable incomes into brackets and taxes each chunk of income at separate rates:

Current income tax rates (single filer)

Your first $9,875 is taxed at 10%

After that, your money is taxed in brackets at progressively higher rates

Biden’s proposal would raise the top tax rate to 39.6%

37%

35%

32%

24%

22%

12%

$40,525

$86,375

$164,925

$209,425

$523,600+

Current income tax rates (single filer)

Your first $9,875 is taxed at 10%

After that, your money is taxed in brackets at progressively higher rates

Biden’s proposal would raise the top tax rate to 39.6%

37%

35%

32%

24%

22%

12%

$40,525

$86,375

$164,925

$209,425

$523,600+

Current income tax rates (single filer)

Your first $9,875 is taxed at 10%

After that, your money is taxed in brackets at progressively higher rates

Biden’s proposal would raise the top tax rate to 39.6%

37%

35%

32%

24%

22%

12%

$40,525

$86,375

$164,925

$209,425

$523,600+

Current income tax rates (single filer)

Your first $9,875 is taxed at 10%

After that, your money is taxed in brackets at progressively higher rates

Biden’s proposal would raise the top tax rate to 39.6%

37%

35%

32%

24%

22%

12%

$164,925

$523,600+

$40,525

$86,375

$209,425

Source: Internal Revenue Service

While raising rates on higher earners would help reduce U.S. income inequality, it would not directly address the increasing concentration of wealth in the hands of a relatively few Americans. It also does not address another core issue for Democrats: whether corporations are paying their fair share of taxes and the practice of booking profits in lower-tax countries. Other proposals tackle those issues.

Higher corporate taxes

The share of revenue that the federal government gets from corporate taxes has fallen to historic lows, particularly after the Trump tax cuts. The Biden administration wants to not only raise the corporate tax rate, but also establish a minimum global corporate tax rate to close offshore tax loopholes.

The Biden administration has demonstrated flexibility in an effort to reach across the aisle. On Thursday June 3, Biden floated a 15% minimum tax for corporations in an effort to recruit Republicans skeptical of the proposed 28% corporate tax rate.

Corporate share of overall U.S. tax revenue

Corporate tax revenue comprised nearly 40% of all tax revenue in 1943

30%

15%

6.6%

1940

1960

1980

2000

2020

Corporate profits after tax ($ billions)

$2.1T

$2T

$1T

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Corporate profits after tax ($ billions)

Corporate share of overall U.S. tax revenue

Corporate tax revenue comprised nearly 40% of all tax revenue in 1943

$2.1T

$2T

30%

$1T

15%

6.6%

1940

1960

1980

2000

2020

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Corporate profits after tax

Corporate share of overall U.S. tax revenue

Corporate tax revenue comprised nearly 40% of all tax revenue in 1943

$2.1T

$2T

30%

$1T

15%

6.6%

1940

1960

1980

2000

2020

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Corporate share of overall U.S. tax revenue

Corporate tax revenue comprised nearly 40% of all tax revenue in 1943

30%

15%

6.6%

1940

1960

1980

2000

2020

Corporate profits after tax ($ billions)

$2.1T

$2T

$1T

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Source: U.S. Office of Management and Budget; Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

A historically high capital gains tax rate

The Biden administration is also proposing to roughly double the tax rate on capital gains. Capital gains taxes are triggered when the owner of an asset, be it a stock or a piece of real estate, decides to sell. Tax is paid on any “gain” or profit, subject to some popular exclusions like part of the profit from selling a primary residence. The proposal is among several ideas that could slow the concentration of wealth in the United States. The proposal would bring capital gains taxes to their highest level in modern times and well above the 35% peak of the 1970s.

Highest capital gains tax rate

43.4%

40%

The highest rate reached 35% in the 1970s

20%

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Highest capital gains tax rate

43.4%

40%

The highest rate reached 35% in the 1970s

20%

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Highest capital gains tax rate

43.4%

40%

The highest rate reached 35% in the 1970s

20%

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Highest capital gains tax rate

43.4%

40%

The highest rate reached 35% in the 1970s

20%

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

Source: Congressional Research Service, Internal Revenue Service

How U.S. taxes compare to other countries

The top U.S. marginal income tax rate is not on the low end of the range of industrialized countries, but it is lower than in many of them, particularly those in Europe.

Edited by

Chris Canipe, Heather Timmons and Lisa Shumaker

Photos

iStock