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What's in The Fiscal Cliff Deal



A deal on the government's budget priorities has been reached, raising  taxes on the wealthy, extending long-term unemployment benefits, and preventing a cut in fees for doctors who treat Medicare patients.


While the deal does extend the Bush-era tax rates for the middle class, most Americans will still see a tax hike this year. That's because both Democrats and Republicans agreed to let the payroll tax holiday enacted two years ago to expire, meaning payroll taxes will go up to 6.2 percent from 4.2 percent.
 

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Cong. Brian Higgins (D- Buffalo)
Dave Levinthal, Politico.com
Prof. Bruce Bryski, Buffalo St. College
 

What's In The Fiscal Cliff Deal:

Tax rates:
Current tax rates will be extended for all wage earners making below $400,000 and couples making below $450,000.

This was a key concession for both Republicans and Democrats. Democrats wanted the threshold for tax increases to rest at $250,000 and Republicans didn't want marginal tax rates to increase for anyone.

The estate tax: It was set to increase from rom 35 percent to 55 percent in 2013. Instead, the compromise sets the new rate at 40 percent with the first $5 million worth of property exempt from being taxed.

Capital gains tax: Capital gains and dividend tax rates will increase from 15 to 20 percent.

Alternative Minimum Tax: A permanent fix to the tax that would hit middle class families

"Doc Fix": Doctors will be shielded from a massive reimbursement gap for treating Medicare patients.

Unemployment benefits: Unemployed workers will receive their benefits which expired over the weekend.

Renewable energy tax credit: The tax credit for renewable energy companies will be extended for another year.

"Milk cliff" avoided: Subsidies for milk are extended, averting looming price hikes.

Congressional pay freeze: A scheduled salary bump for members of Congress will not happen

Tucked into the 150-plus page bill are several tax perks for businesses - businesses you probably didn't even know needed tax perks.

To be clear, these are renewals of existing tax breaks that were set to expire, so they weren't plucked out of thin air during negotiations over the weekend. However, the fact that they were included in a bill that was the result of such acrimonious debate got the attention of some House members who were against the deal.

Included in the bill:

  • An extension of the excise taxes on rum produced in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, which are mostly returned to the territories. Estimated cost: $222 million.
  • An extension of tax deductions for Hollywood to boost film and TV production in the U.S. Estimated cost: $430 million.
  • An extension of a "7-year cost recovery period" for NASCAR-type racing complexes. Estimated cost: $70 million.
  • An extension of a tax credit on the purchase of "2- or 3- wheeled plug-in electric vehicles." Estimated cost: $4 million.
 
The House of Representatives  has given final approval of the fiscal cliff bill with a vote of 257 to 167. The entire Western New York Congressional delegation (Reed, Higgins, Hochul & Slaughter) , voted in favor.

The fact that the bill raised spending rather than cutting it was a major concern for many House Republicans, prompting even House Majority Leader Eric Cantor to declare his opposition to the deal and ultimately vote against it.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., said on the House floor,

"I would like to vote for this, because I do vote for lower taxes, I want Americans to have lower taxes."

He voted against it, however, because of what's lacking from the bill, he said:

"I cannot believe this tax cut will in fact be followed with spending cuts."


Who comes out looking best following the "fiscal cliff" drama?
Democrats
( 19% )
Republicans
( 31% )
White House
( 50% )
 

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Another major concern for both Republicans and Democrats was the bill's treatment of the so-called "sequester" cuts -- across-the-board spending cuts amounting to $1.2 trillion over 10 years (and about $109 billion this year alone) that were set to hit both the Pentagon and domestic programs starting this week.

The deal passed in Congress allocates $24 billion in spending cuts and new revenues to defer the "sequester" cuts for two months, ensuring Congress will have to debate the issue once again within a matter of weeks.

Adding to the urgency of the next expected fiscal showdown, the deal also failed to raise the debt ceiling (the nation's legal borrowing limit). The Treasury Department is expected to exhaust its borrowing capacity around mid-February, just around the time Congress will have to do something about the sequester.

President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, were, in early December, negotiating over a more comprehensive economic package, but leaders sought a more limited deal after those talks fell apart.

The final deal came together after a negotiating session that started Friday with an offer from Senate Republican leader McConnell. McConnell and Vice President Biden worked through Sunday night with White House and congressional staffs to finalize the deal.


01/02/2013 6:37AM
What's in The Fiscal Cliff Deal
What do you think? Good Deal? Best Deal Possible? Horrible?
01/02/2013 9:24AM
A bright new face of the GOP
Eric Cantor should be given a higher profile so more Americans can associate him with the Republicans, the same way that Sarah Palin and Rush Limbaugh have come to symbolize party intelligence and values. And what's with Sean Hannity's ratings anyway?
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