Exclusive: Republicans could target
Obamacare tax in wider tax overhaul - Brady
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[July 20, 2017]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republicans will
consider using planned tax reform to eliminate one of the biggest taxes
in Obamacare, if the Senate fails to overturn the healthcare law, a
senior Republican in the U.S. House of Representatives said on
Wednesday.
Kevin Brady, the top Republican on tax policy in the House as chairman
of the Ways and Means Committee, said Republicans will look at the 3.8
percent Net Investment Income Tax in discussions aimed at unveiling a
tax reform plan in September. The levy is a weight on economic growth,
he said in an interview with Reuters.
Efforts by Republicans to overhaul or repeal the Affordable Care Act,
known as Obamacare, collapsed in the Senate on Tuesday in a major
setback for Republican President Donald Trump. Given a wholesale repeal
or overhaul now seems imperiled, Republicans are looking at other ways
to attack a law they have vowed to overturn since it was signed by
Democratic former President Barack Obama seven years ago.
Brady said tax legislation was unlikely to be able to include the repeal
of other Obamacare taxes. Doing so would result in about $1 trillion in
additional revenue losses over a decade, cutting into efforts to avoid
adding to the federal deficit in the overall tax package, he said.
"Will we look at the Net Investment Income Tax provision? Yes, mainly
because it is incredibly anti-growth the way it is today," Brady said.
But he was cautious about a full repeal of the tax, given the large
revenues involved and the fact that some Senate Republicans resisted
overturning it as part of the healthcare bill that was under
consideration.
The tax raises $172.2 billion in revenue over 10 years to fund
Obamacare, including health insurance subsidies for individuals.
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U.S. Representative Kevin Brady (R-TX), chairman of the House Ways
and Means Committee, sits for an interview about upcoming tax
legislation proposals with Reuters journalists in Washington, U.S.
July 19, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Its repeal is viewed by critics, including some moderate
Republicans, as a tax cut for the wealthy since the tax hits
individuals who earn more than $200,000 a year and married couples
with more than $250,000 in earnings.
Brady said he was most concerned about the investment tax's effect
on small businesses.
"It doesn't just affect high earners. It goes across a broad
spectrum of small business and captures too much of their activity
as well. So we will take a look at that," he said.
However, he noted, "You've got to ask the question: if it couldn't
pass the Senate in healthcare, can it pass the Senate in tax
reform?"
But he added: "Leaving that in place, from an economic standpoint,
is a mistake."
(Reporting by David Morgan; Additional reporting by Yasmeen
Abutaleb, Amanda Becker, Susan Cornwell, Ginger Gibson and Andy
Sullivan; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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