With a new Democratic majority, the agenda on Capitol Hill has shifted
abruptly this year, and no more so than on taxes. For a decade the
focus in Congress was which taxes to cut. Now everywhere you look
someone running the Congress, or running for President, is proposing to
raise taxes on some industry or group of Americans.[ Tax Hike Score Card]
“ | • A Senate Finance Committee plan to raise the
federal tobacco tax by 61 cents to a total of $1 a pack to finance the
Schip health-care expansion. The Senate figures this will raise $35
billion in revenue over five years, if you choose to believe this tax
increase won't produce even more tax-free cigarette sales from Indian
reservations.
• The so-called "Blackstone tax" on private
equity partnerships that go public, raising their 15% rate to the
regular corporate tax rate of 35%. This bipartisan Senate proposal
hasn't been scored yet for revenues but may well pass Congress.
• A tax increase on the "carried interest" of
hedge funds and private equity to 35% from 15%. This has been
introduced in the House and endorsed by Ways and Means Chairman Charles
Rangel and the major Democratic Presidential candidates.
• New York Senator Chuck Schumer tells the New
York Times that he'll oppose this unless the tax increase also applies
to real estate and other partnerships that also now pay the 15% carried
interest tax rate. To put it another way, Mr. Schumer is saying he'll
only support the higher tax rate if it applies to more people.
Meanwhile, by playing this "good cop" role, Mr. Schumer is raising
millions of dollars in campaign contributions from hedge funds and
private equity for Democratic Senate candidates running in 2008.
Brilliant.
• Higher withholding taxes on the U.S.
subsidiaries of foreign companies -- in essence a tax increase on
foreign investment in America. This $7.5 billion tax proposal from
Texas Democrat Lloyd Doggett came out of nowhere last week to appear in
the House farm bill to pay for more agriculture subsidies. It passed.
• Raise the capital gains rate to 28% from the
current 15%. . The last time the U.S. had a capital
gains rate that high was 1978 -- the Jimmy Carter era.
• Deny the domestic manufacturing deduction to
oil producers. This is part of the Senate Finance Committee's energy
bill and is estimated to raise $11.4 billion over 10 years. How this
will increase domestic oil production amid $77 a barrel oil and
widespread clamor for "energy independence" is one of those mysteries
that Congress prefers not to explain.
• A levy on oil and gas produced from
deep-water leases in the Gulf of Mexico. This tax on domestic energy
production is also part of the subsidy-fest known as the House farm
bill and would allegedly raise $6.1 billion.
• A tax surcharge of 4.3 percentage points on
income of more than $500,000, which would take the top marginal rate to
39.3%.
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"Democrats
are genetically deficient in brain cells that allow an understanding of
economics or war. In other words, they should be kept from the reins of
power - always." Livy
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