WASHINGTON, March 8 (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden’s budget for fiscal 2024 will be released Thursday. While the document is always a bit of a wish list, and especially so given the current divided Congress, the Democratic president’s spending and revenue priorities will be key factors in upcoming negotiations with Republicans over raising the debt ceiling.
Here is what to expect:
Cutting nearly $3 trillion from the national deficit
Biden will double down on a State of the Union pledge to trim the national deficit, promising to cut almost $3 trillion over 10 years, with tax hikes on companies and high earners.
The U.S. federal deficit totaled $1.4 trillion in 2023, the Congressional Budget Office said.
As part of the effort, the administration said it would launch new initiatives to crack down on fraud in pandemic-era spending, and other government programs. Biden also wants to increase fines on companies that violate labor laws and divert funding that would have gone to federal prison construction.
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Boosting Medicare with taxes
Biden hopes to raise the Medicare tax on income above $400,000 from 3.8% to 5%, and expand the federal government’s ability to negotiate drug prices to keep the healthcare program solvent, the White House said this week.
The White House wants Congress to give the administration permission to negotiate prices on more drugs with manufacturers and to let those negotiations start sooner after drugs come to market. The budget would also require commercial health insurance plans to provide rebates when some drug prices increase faster than the rate of inflation.
Other healthcare proposals will include increasing access to HIV prevention drugs for people in enrolled in Medicaid and requiring insurance plans to pay back that federal program when they spend less on patient care. Gilead Sciences’ (GILD.O) Truvada and Descovy are approved in the U.S. for pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV.
Buybacks
Biden plans to propose quadrupling the 1% tax on stock buybacks that took effect in January, to encourage companies to invest in their growth instead of boosting shareholders.
The White House has said taxing buybacks levels a distortion in the tax system. Dividends, it said, are taxable for many shareholders but share buybacks weren’t taxable until this year. The plan to boost the buyback tax may struggle to move through the U.S. Congress where Republicans control the House.
Childcare, tax credits
Biden will re-up a provision of his 2021 COVID plan that expanded the child tax credit to lower-income families, and reintroduce plans for federal funding for universal pre-kindergarten.
Rail safety
The budget is expected to include millions in new funding for railroad safety measures after a series of high-profile accidents and derailments.
Billionaire minimum income tax
Biden is expected to reiterate his call for a 20% minimum tax on households worth more than $100 million. The White House refers to it as the “billionaire minimum income tax.”
The tax would make sure the wealthiest of Americans do not pay a tax rate lower than firefighters and teachers, Biden said in his budget proposal last year. Several past attempts by Democrats to push such a proposal has failed to move forward in Congress.
Defense spending
The White House is also expected to request hiking the defense budget by single-digit percentages from the $816 billion allocated this year, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Eliminating tax benefits
Biden will propose to cut back tens of billions of dollars in tax benefits currently enjoyed by oil and gas companies, real estate investors, fund managers, wealthy retirement savers and cryptocurrency traders, according to a document seen by Reuters.
The budget will propose to end “special tax treatment” for oil and gas companies and “fossil fuel tax preferences,” according to the document, which did not provide additional detail on that provision.
It would also propose to end the “like-kind exchange” benefit that allows real estate investors to defer some taxes indefinitely. And it renews Biden’s pledge to end the carried interest “loophole” that effectively allows fund managers to pay a lower rate on their income than many wage workers.
Biden also wants to put a limit on how much people with incomes over $400,000 can hold in retirement accounts that enjoy tax benefits. And he would remove a “special tax subsidy” on cryptocurrency transactions that is not extended to stocks.
Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Nandita Bose, Trevor Hunnicutt, David Shepardson, Mike Stone and Caroline Humer; Edited by Heather Timmons, Andrea Ricci and Josie Kao
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