Senate Republicans Deny $78 Billion Package for Business and Child Tax Relief

Senate Republicans Deny $78 Billion Package for Business and Child Tax Relief

Senate Republicans Deny $78 Billion Package for Business and Child Tax Relief

The current package aimed at restoring a few business tax benefits that were a part of the Republican’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

On 1st of August, the Senate Republicans rejected a bipartisan bill which would have in short term expanded the child tax credit and bring back some business tax benefits. The bill required 60 votes to succeed but failed in a 48-44 procedural vote. 

The business bill package amounted to a $78 billion package of tax cuts which benefits businesses and low-income families. The two constituencies the party needs to win and make it big. 

The package of tax cuts which was $78 billion would help millions of families by making the child tax credit refundable. It would also provide large cash payments to households with children. It would also bring back the expired tax breaks for research and development expenditures as a part of the 2017 tax law. The cost of the tax incentives would be mitigated by prematurely terminating the Employee Retention Tax Credit, a pandemic-era assistance program plagued by fraud.

The vote was expected to fail, which was brought up by the democrats as they brought out the child tax credit in a political messaging push before the November elections. This gives the vulnerable members of the party a chance to vote by putting Republicans on the spot.

In the run-up to elections, Democrats introduced a number of initiatives in the Senate that failed to proceed owing to Republican opposition, including legislation on contraception and IVF, both of which Democrats consider as politically popular concerns. Republicans have blasted the “summer of show votes.”

The Democrats were given an opportunity by the Senate bill tax to push back against the criticism from the Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance of Ohio.

The Vice President of the US who is also the Democratic presidential nominee was falsely accused of ending the child tax credit by Vance. Harris on the other hand has tried for years to increase the child tax credit. 

The Child Tax Credit Expansion

The package tax was aimed at providing a larger child tax credit than the existing one in the first year to the low income families. More than 80% or roughly 16 million children do not at present receive the total credit due to the low income of their families. This data was given by the Centre on Budget and Policy Priorities. These families would be able to claim a larger portion of the credit, and the measure would raise the maximum refundable credit for households that pay little or no income taxes.

The bill would also reduce poverty in half a million children and better the financial situation of over 5 million children who would remain under poverty after the full effect in 2025. It does not, however, go as far as the American Rescue Plan’s expansion of the child tax credit, which reduced child poverty by nearly half but was only effective in 2021.

The families with low income and more than one child would receive the same credit as the  higher income households already do for each child under the current package.

Business Tax Benefits

The current package aimed at restoring a few business tax benefits that were a part of the Republican’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. 

Once again allowing businesses to straight away reduce the cost of their US based investments and research rather than over five years. The act would have immediately deducted 100% investment on machinery and equipment. 

The office of Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon and co-sponsor of the bill, stated that approximately 3.8 million small companies took advantage of these tax breaks in 2021, citing Treasury data.

In addition, relief for victims of recent hurricanes, flooding, wildfires, and last year’s train tragedy in East Palestine, Ohio, was included in the package. Additionally, according to Wyden’s office, it would have expanded the low-income housing tax credit that states are already able to utilise, adding more than 200,000 affordable housing units across the country.

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