- One Democratic plan would overhaul how companies pay taxes on overseas profits.
- It could generate $800 billion, or enough to finance two $1,400 stimulus checks.
- Democrats may clash on taxes as they assemble a party-line spending package.
Fresh off a House vote to advance a $3.5 trillion budget blueprint, Democrats must now draft a massive social spending package. A major point of contention? Taxes.
Before Democrats pass the package with likely unanimous GOP opposition, they're facing some internal disagreements over how fund it - likely a collection of tax hikes on the wealthiest Americans, investors, and large companies. President Biden proposed a 28% corporate rate, higher than the current 21% level. But moderate Democrats like Joe Manchin are already uneasy and say they'd prefer to see a 25% rate instead.
In the process, they would partially roll back President
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A part of that 2017 law includes how the government taxes US-based multinational firms depending on the location of their headquarters and where they earn profits. Democrats want to overhaul this element to raise enough money to pay for measures like President
Kyle Pomerleau, a tax expert at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute, told NBC News the tax changes could raise $800 billion. That's enough money for the federal government to finance two $1,400 stimulus checks similar to the ones most Americans received in the $1.9 trillion Biden stimulus law during the pandemic.
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"To right the ship, we're ending incentives to ship jobs overseas and closing loopholes that allow companies to stash their profits in tax havens," Wyden said in a statement.
The Trump administration's tax law enacted a system that included exemptions on where companies must pay taxes on overseas profits. That was a change from the prior arrangement where firms could stash it abroad and completely avoid paying the full corporate tax.
Democrats are in favor of the current set-up, but they want to levy higher tax rates to a wider range of profits, as well as tailor tax rates to individual countries and not impose them uniformly. Conservatives argue this will stymie the ability of companies to compete abroad and incentivize them to keep their headquarters and profits overseas.
That's part of the reason the Biden administration is pushing for a 15% minimum tax as part of an agreement with nations in the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. Democrats are attempting to persuade other countries to levy the 15% rate so large firms can't evade their taxes.