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The main dispute is over denying tax cuts for the well to do, which Obama and Democrats want to do under their banner of tax fairness. Republicans say such increases would hurt job creation. Following Obama's lead, Reid's bill would extend today's income tax rates through 2013 for everyone but the highest earners, whose top rates would grow from today's 33 and 35 percent up to 36 and 39.6 percent. Reid would limit the itemized deductions and phase out the personal exemption those high earners could claim. And he would impose a top capital gains tax rate on them of 20 percent, up from today's 15 percent top rate. Reid would also allow the expiration of today's estate tax rules, which impose a maximum 35 percent tax rate and exempt the first $5.12 million in an inherited estate's value. Instead, the top rate would rise next year to 55 percent, with only the first $1 million exempted. Owners of 46,700 estates with values between $1 million and $5 million are projected to die next year, according to Congress' nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation, potentially exposing their heirs to the higher taxes proposed by Democrats. Hatch's competing plan would continue the tax cuts for all, including high earners, whose income and capital gains tax rates would not rise and their deductions and personal exemptions would stay intact. Hatch would also retain today's lower rates and higher exemptions for inheritances, which the joint committee estimated would save 3,600 estates next year from higher taxes. Hatch's bill ignores Reid proposals for one-year extensions of tax breaks that Obama's 2009 stimulus law created in three existing programs. Republicans say the provisions were temporary prods for the economy, but Democrats say they were always meant to be permanent. Reid's bill would extend: The American opportunity tax credit, a maximum $2,500 credit per student for college expenses that phases out completely for individuals earning $90,000 and couples making $180,000. Ending it would cost 11 million families an average tax break of $1,100, Treasury Department data shows. Language making the earned income tax credit slightly more generous for working families with three children and for some married couples. The program provides tax credits of up to $5,891 for low-earning workers, defraying their tax bill and providing a government check to people who owe no taxes. Halting the improved benefits for larger families and couples would force an average $500 tax boost on 6 million households, Treasury figures show. A provision increasing the size of tax refunds that some families receive under the Child Tax Credit. Letting that language lapse would hit 12 million households with average tax increases of $800, according to Treasury. The child tax credit is worth up $1,000 per child, which both parties favor continuing. Treasury says that because some families receive benefits from more than one of the provisions Reid would extend, a total of 25 million households would be affected if the language expired.
[Associated
Press;
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