Analysis: Democrats score big wins on climate, drugs with $430 billion
U.S. Senate bill
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[August 08, 2022]
By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats scored a
major policy victory when the U.S. Senate passed a $430 billion climate
change, healthcare and tax bill that will help reduce the carbon
emissions that drive climate change while also cutting drug costs for
the elderly.
President Joe Biden's congressional allies hope the bill, which they
pushed through the Senate over united Republican opposition, will boost
their chances in the Nov. 8 midterm elections, when Republicans are
favored to recapture the majority in at least one chamber of Congress.
The package, called the Inflation Reduction Act, is a dramatically
scaled-back version of a prior bill that was blocked by maverick Senate
Democrats Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema as too expensive.
"This is one of the most comprehensive and impactful bills Congress has
seen in decades: it will reduce inflation, it will lower prescription
drug costs, it will fight climate change, it will close tax loopholes,
and it will reduce -- reduce -- the deficit," Senate Majority Leader
Chuck Schumer said.
"For families struggling to pay the bills, for seniors struggling to pay
for medications, for kids struggling with asthma. This bill is for
them," he said.
The Senate's partisan 51-50 vote, with the tiebreaking vote coming from
Vice President Kamala Harris, sends the legislation on to the
Democratic-controlled House of Representatives, which is expected to
pass it on Friday, after which Biden could sign it into law.
Republicans blasted the bill as a spending "wish list" that they argued
would hurt an economy weighed down by inflation, saying it would kill
jobs, raise energy costs and undermine growth at a time when the economy
is facing a potential recession.
"Hundreds of billions of dollars in tax hikes on a struggling economy
will kill American jobs," said top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell. He
denounced the legislation as a "so-called inflation bill that will not
meaningfully reduce inflation at all, and will actually make inflation
even worse in the short term."
About half of Americans -- some 49% -- support the bill, including 69%
of Democrats and 34% of Republicans, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll
conducted Aug. 3 and 4. The most popular element of the bill is giving
Medicare the power to negotiate drug prices, which 71% of respondents
support, including 68% of Republicans.
Economists, who say the legislation could help the Federal Reserve
combat inflation, do not expect a sizeable impact on the economy in
coming months.
CLIMATE FOCUS
With $370 billion in climate-focused spending, it would become the most
consequential climate change bill ever passed by Congress.
The bill offers businesses and families billions in incentives to
encourage purchases of electric vehicles and energy-efficient
appliances, as well as to spur new investments in wind and solar power
that would double the amount of new, clean electricity-generating
capacity coming online in the United States by 2024, according to
modeling by the Repeat Project at Princeton University.
That would help put the United States on course to meet its pledge to
slash its greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 below 2005 levels,
made at last year's Glasgow climate summit.
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U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) holds a news
conference to tout the a $430 billion drug pricing, energy and tax
bill championed by Democrats at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S.
August 5, 2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
While environmental groups largely embraced the bill, they noted
that compromises secured by Manchin, who represents coal-producing
West Virginia, would prolong U.S. use of fossil fuels.
Those provisions include rules that would only allow the federal
government to authorize new wind and solar energy developments on
federal land when it is also auctioning rights to drill for oil and
natural gas.
DRUG COSTS
The legislation would lower drug costs for the government, employers
and patients, said Juliette Cubanski, deputy director of the
Medicare program at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
"Perhaps the biggest effect would be for people with prescription
drug coverage through Medicare," she said.
A key change is the provision allowing the federal Medicare health
plan for older and disabled Americans to negotiate lower
prescription drug prices.
The pharmaceutical industry says price negotiation would stifle
innovation. Negotiated prices for 10 of the costliest drugs for
Medicare would apply starting in 2026, with that number rising until
it caps at 20 a year in 2029.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates Medicare would
save $101.8 billion over 10 years by negotiating drug prices.
The provision also introduces a $2,000 annual cap on out-of-pocket
costs for the elderly through the Medicare program.
TAX PROVISIONS
The bill also imposes a new excise tax on stock buybacks, a late
change after Sinema raised objections over another provision that
would have imposed new levies on carried interest, currently a tax
loophole for hedge fund and private equity financiers. The provision
was dropped.
The excise tax is expected to raise an additional $70 billion in tax
revenue per year, lawmakers said. That is more than the carried
interest provision had been forecast to raise.
A report by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released
prior to that last change estimated the measure would reduce the
federal deficit by a net $101.5 billion over the next decade.
That was about one-third of the $300 billion in deficit reduction
predicted by Senate Democrats, but excluded a projected $204 billion
revenue gain from increased Internal Revenue Service enforcement.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Additional reporting by Valerie
Volcovici and Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan
Oatis and Daniel Wallis)
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