Millions of U.S. households would not get COVID-19 payments under new
Biden plan
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[March 04, 2021]
By Andy Sullivan and Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Millions of U.S.
households who received coronavirus-relief payments under President
Donald Trump would not get aid under a modified version of President Joe
Biden's $1.9 trillion aid package announced on Wednesday, analysts said.
Under a compromise with centrist Democrats in the Senate, those payments
would only go to individuals who earned less than $80,000, or couples
who earned less than $160,000.
The income cutoff had been set at $100,000 and $200,000, respectively,
under a version of the bill passed by the Democratic-led House of
Representatives on Saturday.
That means nearly 9 million fewer households would get direct payments
this time around, said Kyle Pomerleau, a tax analyst with the
conservative American Enterprise Institute.
The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy calculated that those
payments now would help 11.8 million fewer adults and 4.6 million fewer
children than the more generous version that passed the House.
But 200 million adults and 80 million children would still see benefits,
the left-leaning think tank estimated.
"For the bottom 60% of Americans, the folks who really need help, there
would be basically no difference at all," ITEP analyst Steve Wamhoff
said.
The lower caps would reduce the cost of the massive package by between
$13 billion and $20 billion, they said - roughly 1% of the total.
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The sun rises on the U.S. Capitol dome before Joe Biden's
presidential inauguration in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2021.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Some 162 million households received payments under the first round
of payments included in the CARES Act of 2020, according to the
Internal Revenue Service.
The Democratic-controlled Senate expects to open debate on the
package as early as Wednesday, with a final vote for passage seen
later in the week.
At a total cost of more than $400 billion, the direct aid is one of
the largest elements in a sweeping aid package that also pays for
vaccines and medical supplies to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, and
earmarks hundreds of billions of dollars to help revive the world's
largest economy.
The pandemic has killed more than 515,000 Americans to date and
thrown millions out of work.
The bill would provide payments of up to $1,400 per person,
including children - a significant jump from the $1,200-per-person
payments approved under the CARES Act and the $600-per-person
payments Congress approved in December.
As in those earlier aid packages, the payments would be reduced for
individuals earning more than $75,000 and couples earning more than
$150,000. The compromise announced on Wednesday means the payments
are phased out more dramatically.
(Reporting by Andy Sullivan and Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone
and Peter Cooney)
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