TAXVOX Could Harris’s Proposed Tax Increases Cover The Cost Of Her Plans?
Renu Zaretsky
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Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris has released an ambitious economic agenda that includes significant expansions to family tax credits, a tax exemption for tip income, and a commitment not to raise taxes on those earning less than $400,000. She plans to help fund these initiatives with a series of tax increases targeting high-income individuals and corporations. 

But the biggest unknown remains how Harris would address expiring provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) after 2025. If Harris keeps her no-tax increase pledge and extends TCJA provisions for those earning less than $400,000 a year, the net cost of her tax-cutting proposals would increase significantly. This is especially challenging when the federal debt is about 100 percent of GDP and growing, along with the costs of addressing it

Tax cuts for families

Harris’s proposed tax cuts could cost approximately $3 trillion over the next decade. Here’s a breakdown.

The total estimated cost of these proposals is more than $2.8 trillion. Additional measures, including Harris’ proposed expansion of the eligible start-up expenses deduction from $5,000 to $50,000 and a still-to-be-defined tax credit for key industries, could push the overall figure beyond $3 trillion.

Tax increases for the wealthy and corporations

Similar to past Biden-Harris proposals and the administration’s fiscal year 2025 budget, Harris calls for several tax increases targeting the wealthy and corporations to help cover the costs of other initiatives. These measures are projected to raise over $2 trillion over ten years.

  • Increase in top marginal income tax rate: Allowing the top rate to revert to 39.6 percent for incomes above $400,000 could generate approximately $170.5 billion over ten years relative to current law.
  • Expansion of the Net Investment Income Tax: Increasing the rate to 5 percent for incomes above $400,000 is expected to raise an additional $383.5 billion over ten years.
  • Capital gains and dividends tax: Taxing long-term capital gains and dividends at 28 percent for those with incomes over $1 million, along with taxing unrealized gains at death, could contribute around $171.8 billion over ten years.
  • Corporate tax rate increase: Raising the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 28 percent could yield approximately $1.1 trillion over ten years.
  • Stock buyback excise tax: Quadrupling the stock buyback tax from 1 percent to 4 percent could generate $150 billion over ten years.
  • A minimum tax on unrealized capital gains of wealthy taxpayers: Treasury estimates that a 25 percent minimum tax on unrealized gains for individuals with net worth exceeding $100 million could raise $500 billion over ten years, but because it is a new type of tax the amount it would raise is highly uncertain.

While it is common for political campaigns to emphasize the politically popular aspects of their agenda, the mismatch between the campaign’s proposed tax breaks and revenue increases would add another wrinkle to next year’s debate over the long-term fate of the TCJA and the trajectory of federal deficits.

 

Tags EITC CTC niit LIHTC tax-exempt tips first-time homebuyer tax credit Affordable Care Act Advance Premium Tax Credit
Primary topic Individual Taxes
Research Area Presidential campaign proposals