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By TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer Tom Raum, Associated Press Writer Tue
Sep 7, 8:00 pm ET
WASHINGTON President Barack Obama's proposed tax breaks for business sound
like ideas that have enjoyed broad Republican backing in the past. But in
today's toxic political atmosphere, he's unlikely to get much if any GOP
help.
Still, his plans put Republicans on the spot, making it harder for them to say
no to legislation they once embraced.
In a speech on Wednesday in Cleveland, Obama will ask Congress to let
businesses quickly write off 100 percent of their spending on new plants and
equipment through 2011.
Its part of a raft of new Obama proposals to spur job creation and help
businesses and to try to give his party a much-needed boost ahead of November
elections that will determine which party controls the House and Senate.
Clearly frustrated by the halting economic recovery and mindful of polls
showing Republicans poised to make big midterm gains, Obama had his economic
advisers come up with a fresh set of proposals with job-creating potential.
Among them: a $50 billion program to rebuild roads, railways and airports and
to create a new infrastructure bank to oversee long-term projects. Legislation
containing multiple public works projects has usually been popular in Congress
across party lines.
The administration has not spelled out exactly how it would pay for all the new
proposals, but suggested it would offset tax cuts by closing various corporate
loopholes and levying targeted tax hikes on big business, particularly on the
oil and gas industry and on multinational corporations. Some of these tax
proposals were included in the budget Obama submitted to Congress earlier this
year but were never acted on by Congress.
Rep. Dave Camp of Michigan, the senior Republican on the tax-writing House Ways
and Means Committee, called Obama's business tax measures serious proposals
worthy of consideration. But he said that "raising taxes to cut taxes is at
best a zero sum game."
The proposed tax break for research and development has been around in one form
or another since 1981 and in the past has drawn bipartisan support. However,
Congress previously extended it just for short periods of time, usually just
for one or two years, with frequent lapses that make it hard for businesses to
plan. The credit most recently lapsed in 2009.
Obama has long advocated making the credit permanent.
His proposal to let companies quickly write off 100 percent of their
investments in new plants and equipment is similar to proposals advanced
several times by President George W. Bush with considerable GOP support at
the time.
The idea is to give companies an incentive to spend and invest now, rather than
later. The administration claims the change would put nearly $200 billion in
the hands of businesses over the next two years.
Under the current law, a company gets to deduct 50 percent of the costs
upfront, and the remainder over three to 20 years, depending on the nature of
the investment.
"This measure would provide tax incentives for businesses to invest in the
United States when our economy needs it most," says a White House fact sheet.
A senior administration official said the expensing provision would potentially
benefit 1.5 million corporations and several million individuals. The tax break
would be retroactive to this Wednesday.
Obama's expensing and R&D tax credit proposals would generally help large
businesses the most. A separate bill is before the Senate to give special tax
breaks and loan incentives to small businesses. Obama has said that legislation
should be Congress' first order of business when it returns next week from its
summer recess.
Chris Edwards, director of tax policy for the libertarian-leaning Cato
Institute, said he favors both a permanent research tax credit and Obama's
proposal for 100 percent expensing, calling both "very positive" steps and a
sign that the administration is getting seriously worried about the economy.
Still, he added, "the administration would nullify the benefits if they are
matched by various tax proposals for businesses."
Thomas Mann, a political scientist at the Brookings Institution, said Obama's
three proposals infrastructure spending, a permanent R&D credit and upfront
100 percent business write-offs "constitute a re-entry into the
make-the-economy-grow argument."
"All of them had support among conservatives and right-of-center economists for
many years. That makes it more awkward for the Republicans just to say no,"
Mann said. But that isn't stopping them, he added.
The Obama proposals would require congressional approval, which is highly
uncertain given Washington's partisan atmosphere and the fast-approaching
midterms.
"We understand what season we've entered in Washington," said White House
spokesman Robert Gibbs. Still, he said, even if Congress doesn't take up
Obama's new proposals before the elections, "the president and the economic
team still believe that these represent some very important ideas."
The acceleration of the business write-off for plants and equipment would have
a net long-term cost of $30 billion, far less than the amount the legislation
would put in the hands of businesses, the White House contends. That's because
if companies take their write-offs upfront, they can't depreciate the costs
over a longer period for future tax breaks as they do now.
Republican leaders greeted Obama's most recent proposals cautiously, given past
GOP support for various components.
"The White House is missing the big picture," said House Minority Leader John
Boehner, R-Ohio. "These aren't necessarily bad proposals. ..." But he said they
don't address the larger problems of "excessive government spending" and
Democratic tax policies, including the impending expiration of Bush-era tax
cuts.
Obama and Democratic congressional leaders want to renew the Bush tax cuts for
households earning under $250,000 a year. Republicans want to extend all of
them, saying a recession is no time to raise taxes.
Obama's recently departed budget director, Peter Orszag, suggested in an op-ed
article in Tuesday's New York Times that policymakers seem locked "into a
budget scenario out of which there are few politically plausible routes of
escape." As a compromise, he suggested extending the Bush tax cuts until 2013
"and then end them altogether."
Gibbs said he had never heard Orszag make such an argument in internal White
House deliberations and that the president did not agree with him on such a
"compromise."
___
Associated Press writers Julie Pace and Stephen Ohlemacher contributed to this
report.