Republicans move on tax reform; Fed
officials see economic threats
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[October 06, 2017]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congressional
Republicans moved to hasten an overhaul of the U.S. tax code on
Thursday, while Federal Reserve officials warned in rare public remarks
that President Donald Trump's tax plan could lead to inflation and
unsustainable federal debt.
In a procedural step forward, the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives approved by a 219-206 vote a fiscal 2018 spending
blueprint to help advance an eventual tax bill. The blueprint contains a
legislative tool that would let Republicans pass a tax bill by a simple
majority vote in the Senate, where they hold 52 of 100 seats, allowing
them to bypass Democrats.
Separately, the Senate Budget Committee approved its own budget
resolution and sent it to the full Senate for a vote, expected after Oct
16.
Trump and top Republicans in Congress hope to enact a package of tax
cuts for corporations, small businesses and individuals before January,
pledging that sharply lower taxes will boost U.S. economic growth, jobs
and wages.
Wall Street rose on the steps taken, with major market indexes rising to
record high closes again on Thursday as investors warmed to the notion
that a sweeping tax overhaul could be in place by the first quarter.
"It sounds like they're serious about drafting tax reform legislation
and that gives everyone greater confidence that this might actually
happen," said Phil Orlando, chief equity strategist at Federated
Investors in New York. He predicted tax reform could lift economic
growth and corporate earnings for 2019 and send the benchmark S&P 500
<.SPX> index above 3,000. The index on Thursday finished at 2,552.07.
But Federal Reserve officials questioned the rosy Republican scenario,
saying that proposed tax cuts could deliver a short-term growth surge
but also bring high inflation, burdensome government debt levels and an
eventual return to sub-par economic growth.
Unless targeted to raise productivity and underlying potential, San
Francisco Fed President John Williams said a tax cut could feed
"unsustainable" growth that would ultimately be undone by asset price
bubbles, inflation and possible recession.
Fed officials generally refrain from commenting on fiscal policy. But
the Trump administration is proposing up to $6 trillion in personal and
corporate tax cuts at a time when many economists feel the country does
not need massive stimulus.
DEMOCRATS SAY IT BENEFITS THE WEALTHY
The procedural actions in Congress set the stage for a possible clash
among Republicans that could delay consideration of a bill. While the
House budget prohibits tax reform from adding to the deficit, the
Senate's version would allow tax legislation to lose $1.5 trillion in
revenue over a decade. Republicans claim tax reform would reduce the
deficit in years beyond a decade.
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The U.S. flag flies in front of the Capitol Dome. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts
House and Senate Republicans must iron out their differences and
approve the same budget resolution before it can provide Republicans
the legislative advantage requiring only a simple majority vote in
the Senate known as reconciliation.
The criticism from the Fed was only the latest to hit the Republican
plan.
Democrats have assailed it as benefiting the wealthiest Americans
while raising taxes on the middle class and cutting spending on
social programs, including the Medicare and Medicaid healthcare
programs for senior citizens, the poor and the disabled.
Republican lawmakers are also questioning a proposal to help pay for
tax cuts by eliminating popular tax deductions. Some Republican
fiscal hawks have warned they will not back a tax reform package
that adds to the deficit.
The Trump tax plan would add about $2.4 trillion to the deficit over
the next decade, said the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, a
Washington think tank, at a time when the national debt already
exceeds $20 trillion.
"Where is all that money coming from?" Representative John Yarmuth,
the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, asked on the House
floor. "If you're listening to this and you're not a millionaire,
probably from you."
In the Senate, Democrats sought to hamstring the Republican budget
resolution with amendments that would prevent tax legislation from
benefiting the wealthy, raising taxes on the middle class and adding
to the deficit. But Republicans successfully turned aside the effort
by voting the measures down.
Democrats also called for an end to reconciliation, the legislative
procedure that would sideline them in a Senate vote.
(Additional reporting by Howard Schneider in St Louis, Ann Saphir in
Austin, Texas, and Herb Lash in New York; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh
and Leslie Adler)
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