Clinton
seeks surcharge tax on wealthiest tier of Americans
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[January 12, 2016]
By Amanda Becker
MANCHESTER, New Hampshire (Reuters) - U.S.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Monday proposed a 4
percent tax on the wealthiest sliver of taxpayers who earn more than $5
million per year.
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The so-called "surcharge" on the wealthiest 0.02 percent would
generate $150 billion over the next decade, according to a Clinton
campaign aide.
The suggested tax follows Clinton's promise last month as she
campaigned alongside billionaire investor Warren Buffett to build on
the "Buffett rule," which would establish a minimum tax rate of 30
percent on those earning more than $1 million per year. Buffett has
criticized tax policies that allow the rich to pay lower rates than
the middle class.
"I want to go further and impose what I call a fair share surcharge
on multi-millionaires because right now, we’re behind and we need to
get the wealthy and the corporations to pay for their fair share, so
I can keep my promise, which is I will not raise taxes on the middle
class," Clinton said at a campaign stop in Iowa on Monday.
 The Democratic front-runner, Clinton is just weeks out from the
first party-nominating contests in Iowa and New Hampshire, where she
is trying to fend off her chief rival, U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders
of Vermont, a democratic socialist who has made reducing income
inequality the theme of his campaign.
Clinton's proposals have included a $350 billion plan to reduce
college debt; a $275 billion plan to invest in infrastructure and a
$30 billion plan to assist coal-dependent regions as the country
transitions to renewable energy.
At the same time, she has promised not to raise taxes on families
earning less than $250,000 per year, and whose support she needs to
secure the Democratic nomination ahead of the election in November.
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Clinton will release more tax proposals later this week that were
"designed to ensure the wealthy pay their fair share," her campaign
said.
For more on the 2016 presidential race, see the Reuters blog, “Tales
from the Trail” (http://blogs.reuters.com/talesfromthetrail/).
(Reporting by Amanda Becker; additional reporting by Alana Wise;
additional; writing by David Alexander; Editing by Eric Walsh and
Bernadette Baum and Alistair Bell)
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