House Democrats presented a smaller-scale overhaul of the way investments are taxed than President Joe Biden proposed earlier this year, highlighting the political challenge in enacting higher levies ahead of next year’s midterm elections.
The plan, released by the House Ways and Means Committee Monday, sets the top rate for taxing capital gains -- money earned from the sale of assets such as stocks or property -- at 25%, up from 20% under current law. Including a 3.8% Medicare surtax on high earners, the top capital gains rate would be 28.8%, taking effect in tax years ending after Sept. 13, 2021.
That’s far short of the 39.6% rate -- or 43.4% including the surtax -- Biden proposed for those earning $1 million or more.
The new rate would apply to those in the top tax bracket for long-term capital gains, which in 2021 covers individual filers earning more than $445,850 and married joint filers earning more than $501,600, according to the Ways and Means Committee.
The changes are a component of measures designed to help pay for a major expansion in spending on social programs -- the bulk of Biden’s longer-term economic plan. That broader legislative package, outlined at $3.5 trillion, will require unity in the Senate Democratic caucus to get enacted via a special fast-track process, given universal Republican opposition.
Inheritance Transfers
The draft text released Monday also leaves out a Biden proposal to end the “step-up in basis” treatment for assets passing from a deceased individual to an heir. Biden’s plan would have taxed those assets before they were inherited, but several Democrats had said they worried the change would pose hardships for family-owned businesses and farms as heirs would need to stump up cash to pay the tax.
The Treasury Department had estimated that Biden’s capital gains changes, including taxing unrealized appreciation at death, would have raised $322.5 billion over a decade.
Lawmakers will still have the chance to amend the House panel’s proposal, and the Senate Finance Committee is moving ahead on its own track. The head of that panel indicated Monday that addressing step-up in basis may yet be in the cards.
“It’s important to address the fact that billionaire heirs may never” pay “tax on billions in stock gains,” Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon said in an emailed statement released by his office. “The nurses, firefighters, and teachers who pay their taxes with every paycheck know the system is broken when billionaire heirs never pay tax on billions in stock gains.”
The House Democrats’ draft plan does include hikes in levies on income. The top marginal rate would return to the 39.6% that existed before then-President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax cuts. And there’s a 3% surtax on individuals with adjusted gross income in excess of $5 million.