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Thursday, November 21, 2024
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    Biden Announces the Build Back Better Framework

    If you earn less than $400,000 a year, you won’t pay a single penny more in federal taxes, period: says President Biden.

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    GNB Desk
    GNB Desk
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    President Joe Biden on Thursday unveiled a framework for a 1.75-trillion-U.S.-dollar social spending package following weeks of intensive negotiations with congressional Democrats.

    The so-called Build Back Better Framework includes 555 billion dollars in clean energy and climate investments, 400 billion dollars in funding for child care and free preschool, 200 billion dollars in child tax & earned income tax credits, and 150 billion dollars in investments for affordable housing, according to a statement released by the White House.

    The framework seeks to impose new taxes on the largest corporations and the wealthiest Americans to raise revenue of around 2 trillion dollars over a decade to fully pay for the social spending plan.

    If passed, the framework will impose a 15 percent minimum tax on corporate profits for firms with earnings over 1 billion dollars reported to shareholders, and a 1 percent surcharge on corporate stock buybacks, according to the fact sheet.

    The framework would also apply a 5 percent surtax rate on individual incomes above 10 million dollars and an additional 3 percent surtax on incomes above 25 million dollars.

    The framework is far smaller than Biden’s original 3.5-trillion-dollar proposal, and it has not been written into legislative language yet.

    “No one got everything they wanted, including me, but that’s what compromise is. That’s consensus,” Biden said in remarks at the White House before departing for a week of summits in Europe.

    “Given half a chance, the American people have never ever, ever, ever left the country down, so let’s get this done,” Biden said, urging Congress to pass both the social spending package and the bipartisan infrastructure bill.

    It’s not clear whether the framework would pave the way for the House of Representatives to approve the 1.2-trillion-dollar bipartisan infrastructure bill that was passed by the Senate earlier this year.

    Progressive House Democrats have held up the Senate-passed bill for months, demanding a vote on the larger social spending plan. 

    Investments broken down as below:

    (With inputs from agencies)

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