President Joe Biden made a fresh effort on Monday to persuade Congress to take steps to overhaul the tax code and squeeze more revenue from the largest companies and the wealthiest households.
The Treasury Department released the so-called Greenbook that details plans for $2.5 trillion in tax hikes on corporations and high-earning households, including a modified wealth tax and eliminating the carried-interest tax break for investment funds. That’s on top of the $1.5 trillion of tax increases included in the House-passed version of Biden’s Build Back Better plan that weren’t detailed in this document. That bill is currently stalled in the Senate.
The Greenbook report accompanies the White House’s $5.8 trillion 2023 budget request, also released on Monday. It effectively serves as the revenue side of the ledger, against Biden’s spending priorities in the budget. The document includes several tax ideas -- including raising the tax rates on capital-gains income, corporate profits and individual earnings -- that have already been abandoned in Congress because of lack of consensus.
The document serves as a wish list for Biden’s tax priorities and will likely be greatly revised as Democrats in Congress begin to shape a social spending and tax bill that meet the requirements of two lawmakers who sometimes have different priorities: Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona.
The budget’s planned investments are “more than fully paid for through tax code reforms requiring corporations and the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share, closing loopholes, and improving tax administration,” the Treasury Department said in a statement.
One of Biden’s most novel ideas is a proposal for a minimum tax on mega-millionaires and billionaires, including on their unrealized gains. The concept has been popular in progressive circles for years, but Biden shied away from it during the presidential campaign and during his first year in office. The proposal would raise an estimated $360 billion over a decade from roughly the wealthiest 20,000 households in the country.
Biden’s billionaire tax faces a difficult road in Congress, where House Democrats already rejected including a similar proposal in their version of the Build Back Better plan that past last fall.
The billionaire tax is a key fault line between moderate Democrats and progressives, who have been pushing for a robust overhaul to the tax code so that the wealthiest Americans pay significantly more. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden has been advocating for a series of related proposals for years.
“There’s no way to fix our broken tax code without getting at the problem of billionaires avoiding taxes for decades, if not indefinitely,” Wyden said in a statement. “While there are differences between the president’s proposal and the Billionaires Income Tax, we’re rowing in the same direction.”
Biden’s Treasury appointees are talking with lawmakers on Capitol Hill about how to win support for the billionaires tax proposal, a Treasury official told reporters Monday. This plan includes some features that address concerns from prior proposals about how to tax wealth the same as work, the official said.