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            Highlights of the president’s plan call 
            for: 
            --An end to taxes on dividends that are 
            paid to investors. 
            --An increase from $25,000 to $75,000 
            as the amount a business could write off on capital investment, and 
            this amount would be indexed for inflation. 
            --Lower income tax rates for families 
            scheduled to go into effect in 2004 and 2006 would now be 
            retroactive to Jan. 1, 2003. 
            --The so-called "marriage penalty" tax, 
            scheduled to be decreased in 2009, would be decreased retroactive to 
            Jan. 1, 2003. 
            --Families with children would receive 
            an increase in the tax credit from $600 to $1,000 per child under 
            age 17 this year instead in 2010. 
            --The top four tax brackets would be 
            reduced immediately, and millions of Americans would move into the 
            lowest bracket, at 10 percent, this year instead of waiting until 
            2008. 
            --A total of $3.6 billion would be made 
            available to states to help unemployed people and for job retraining 
            programs. 
            --An unemployed person would have up to 
            $3,000 available for expenses incurred in looking for a job. 
              
            
             
            The savings for each family or 
            individual would be dependent on many factors; however, according to 
            administration estimates, 92 million taxpayers would receive, on 
            average, a tax cut of $1,083 in 2003. 
            The president’s plan calls for an 
            immediate $102 billion of tax cuts in 2003, with the remaining $572 
            billion to be phased in over the next 10 years. 
            Democratic leaders immediately assailed 
            the Bush proposal as a plan that favors the rich and proposed their 
            own $136 billion plan focused on tax cuts, help for the unemployed 
            and a package of aid for states.   
        
         
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            Initial reaction at the national level 
            was evenly divided. An MSNBC poll of 36,668 people, when asked if 
            they thought the president’s plan would work, showed a slim 51 
            percent compared with 49 percent who thought the Bush plan would not 
            work and does not do enough for the average American 
            On the local level, Mayor Beth Davis of 
            Lincoln responded favorably to the Bush proposal. When asked 
            specifically whether the proposal’s allowance for a business to 
            write off a greater amount of capital investment would aid the local 
            efforts to build an industrial park, she responded, "The city should 
            now move forward with the industrial park proposal, as business may 
            be more inclined to expand."  
            Logan County Board member Pat O'Neill, 
            while stressing that he is a strong supporter of economic 
            development, wanted to take a more cautious route. "Until I see an 
            economic turnaround nationally, I don't think pursuing the 
            industrial park would be a wise choice at this time." O'Neill 
            pointed to a Peoria factory that had recently closed, with 
            approximately 200 people losing their jobs.  
            Clarence Barney of H&R Block in Lincoln 
            believed that "doing away with the dividend tax" would be the major 
            stimulus to the economy. Mr. Barney stated that he would, in fact, 
            probably "see a decrease in business because it would make the 
            filing of tax returns easier" if stock dividends are no longer taxed 
            for the individual taxpayer.  The 
            president’s proposal will now move on to the Congress, where the 
            House and Senate will begin debate on the plan. Both Republicans and 
            Democrats expect changes to be made and expect some type of 
            compromise proposal to be agreed upon, possibly sometime this 
            summer. 
            [Ken Ebelherr] 
            For more information on the president's 
            plan, see 
            http://www.whitehouse.gov/. 
              
              
            
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