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Obama to Back More Business Tax Breaks 09/07 12:26
President Barack Obama will call on Congress to pass new tax breaks that
would allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their new capital
investments through 2011, the latest in a series of proposals the White House
is rolling out in hopes of showing action on the economy ahead of the November
elections.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama will call on Congress to pass new
tax breaks that would allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their new
capital investments through 2011, the latest in a series of proposals the White
House is rolling out in hopes of showing action on the economy ahead of the
November elections.
An administration official said the tax breaks would save businesses $200
billion over two years, allowing companies to have more cash on hand. The
president will outline the proposal during a speech on the economy in Cleveland
Wednesday.
Amid an uptick in unemployment to 9.6 percent, and polls showing that the
November election could be dismal for Democrats, Obama has promised to propose
new steps to stimulate the economy. In addition to the business investment tax
breaks, he will also call for a $50 billion infrastructure investment and a
permanent expansion of research and development tax credits for companies.
The proposals would require congressional approval, which is highly
uncertain given Washington's partisan atmosphere and the approaching midterm
elections --- a reality that's not lost on the White House.
"We understand what season we've entered in Washington," White House
spokesman Robert Gibbs said Tuesday. "We certainly hope that there are
measures, including some of the ones that the president will outline, that
Congress will consider. If they don't do that prior to the election, the
president and the economic team still believe that these represent some very
important ideas."
Republicans were quick to attack the president's proposals for missing the
mark.
"The White House is missing the big picture. None of its plans address the
two big problems that are hurting our economy: excessive government spending,
and the uncertainty that their policies....are creating for small businesses,"
House Minority Leader John Boehner said.
With the public growing increasingly concerned about the mounting federal
deficit, the White House has been careful to avoid labeling their proposals as
a stimulus program, hoping to avoid drawing comparisons to the massive $814
billion stimulus Obama signed last year.
"I don't think this is anything near the level of what was enacted near the
beginning of the administration," Gibbs said.
Even if legislators could pass some of the proposals in the short window
between their return to Capitol Hill in mid-September and the elections, it's
unlikely the efforts would significantly stimulate the economy by November.
The tax breaks for capital investments Obama is proposing would build on
stimulus measures enacted in 2008 and 2009 that allowed businesses to
depreciate 50 percent of their capital investments. A separate small business
bill the White House is urging the Senate to pass would extend that tax break
through the end of this year.
If Congress passes the administration's proposal to expand the tax breaks to
100 percent, several million people and 1.5 million businesses would benefit,
said the administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity
because the formal announcement has not been made.
The official estimated the ultimate cost to taxpayers over 10 years would be
$30 billion, with most of the money lost in tax revenue being recouped as the
economy strengthens.
(KA)
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