Debt limit showdown looms sooner as
wealthy bet on Trump tax cut
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[June 08, 2017]
By David Morgan and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S.
Congress may be headed for a reckoning with the federal debt limit
within weeks, thanks to wealthy Americans and corporations deferring tax
payments in the hope that they would benefit from the lower tax rates
promised by President Trump.
Trump promised tax cuts during his election campaign last year and has
reiterated those promises in recent months leading some wealthy
Americans and businesses to shift accounting for income into the future,
betting that lower tax rates will arrive, perhaps in 2018, wealth
managers told Reuters.
"Everyone wants to talk about deferring income," said Mark Copeland,
senior partner at Signature Estate & Investment Advisors LLC in Newport
Beach, California.
The U.S. stock market has also rallied since Trump's election victory in
November, partly on hopes for lower corporate tax rates.
“We are starting to prepare clients for potentially lower taxes in
2018," said Julia Carlson, chief executive and at Financial Freedom
Wealth Management Group LLC in Oregon.
Trump promised to cut taxes as far back as September 2015 in a four-page
plan and reiterated those promises in a two-page "Contract with the
American Voter" before last November's election and again in a one-page
document in April, but Republicans in Congress remain divided on tax
reform.
The delay to tax payments could help to explain why tax receipts this
fiscal year are coming in more slowly than projected, said tax experts
and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), an arm of Congress.
"Taxpayers may have shifted more income than projected ... to later
years, expecting legislation to reduce tax rates to be enacted this
year," the CBO said in a monthly report on Wednesday.
The weaker tax revenues this year have forced the U.S. Treasury to
borrow more money than expected to cover the federal budget deficit and
that is putting the government on track to hit its legal debt limit
sooner than expected, experts said.
The U.S. government has a legal limit on how much it can borrow,
currently set at about $19.8 trillion and the limit can only be
increased by a vote of Congress.
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A man walks past the U.S. Capitol building at sunset in Washington,
U.S. May 17, 2017. REUTERS/Zach Gibson
The need to raise the debt limit usually creates partisan debate in
Washington. Conservative Republicans like to use the debt limit
issue as leverage to demand cuts in spending but Democrats and
moderate Republicans usually oppose such ultimatums on the grounds
that the borrowings are used to fund spending approved previously by
Congress.
This year, with Trump's legislative agenda stalled and Congress
preoccupied by Trump's firing of former FBI director James Comey,
the House Republicans known as the House Freedom Caucus along with
outside conservative groups are again demanding spending cuts for
support to raise the debt limit.
In 2011 the failure to raise the debt limit in a timely way and the
possibility that the U.S. government might default on its
obligations led to the U.S. losing its prized triple-A credit rating
from Standard & Poor's.
Since mid-March the U.S. Treasury has been using emergency funding
powers to postpone hitting the debt limit and those measures had
been expected to last until about October, but lower tax receipts so
far this year may mean the debt limit will be hit
sooner-than-expected.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin urged Congress last month to raise
the debt ceiling before lawmakers break for a long August summer
recess, a call echoed last week by House Democratic leader Nancy
Pelosi.
(Additional reporting by Ginger Gibson; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh
and Clive McKeef)
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