Raise corporate tax rate to 28%
Joe Biden
"He will ask wealthy Americans and big corporations to pay their fair share, including by: Raising the corporate tax rate to 28%."
Biden Promise Tracker
Compromise
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As a candidate, President Joe Biden proposed raising the federal tax rate on corporations from 21% to 28%, so that "wealthy Americans and big corporations pay their fair share."
But after pushback in Congress, Biden pursued a different approach. Now that the Senate passed a bill negotiated by Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Chuck Schumer of New York on Aug. 7, taxes for some of the nation's largest companies are poised to increase, though not in the across-the-board fashion Biden envisioned.
Under the bill the Senate passed, corporations that have profits exceeding $1 billion for three consecutive years would face a new minimum 15% tax on corporate "book income," which generally means the amount companies report to investors.
The provision, which would be effective for tax years beginning after Dec. 31, 2022, seeks to ensure that if companies are reporting large profits to investors, they can't simultaneously game the system by reporting smaller profits for tax purposes.
Having two different sets of rules "helps explain why some large profitable companies pay very little in federal corporate income taxes," the Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center has written.
Passing the Senate was the bill's largest hurdle; the measure now moves to the House, where it is expected to pass. From there, it goes to the White House, where Biden has pledged to sign it.
The Tax Foundation, a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based think tank, projects the provision would raise $200 billion over 10 years but added that the figure would be lower if big corporations pursue tax avoidance.
Also, the impact would not be uniform. Tax Policy Center analyses suggest the different approaches to taxing corporations could help some sectors and hurt others. For instance, the tax code favors research and capital investments, so using a book rate tax could remove some deductions and credits, hurting capital-intensive sectors such as utilities, transportation and manufacturing.
In any case, there are significant differences in scope and method between what passed and what Biden had promised during the campaign.
"The minimum tax is a parallel tax that firms may, or may not, be subject to in a given year," said Kyle Pomerleau, a senior fellow with the American Enterprise Institute, a center-right think tank also based in Washington, D.C.
We rate the promise a Compromise.
Tax Foundation, "Who Gets Hit by the Inflation Reduction Act Book Minimum Tax?" Aug. 4, 2022
Tax Foundation, "Details & Analysis of the Senate Inflation Reduction Act Tax Provisions," Aug. 2, 2022
Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, "What Is Biden's Minimum Book Income Tax on Corporations?" Nov. 2, 2021
Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, "Book Minimum Tax May Discourage Investment More Than a Rate Hike," Nov. 18, 2021
Email interview with Kyle Pomerleau, senior fellow with the American Enterprise Institute, Aug. 8, 2022
Email interview with Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst with the Tax Foundation, Aug. 8, 2022
As a candidate, President Joe Biden proposed raising the federal tax rate on corporations from 21% to 28%, so that "wealthy Americans and big corporations pay their fair share."
But after pushback in Congress, Biden decided on a different approach to making it harder for companies to avoid taxation: enacting a minimum tax rate on the income reported to investors, rather than on a company's tax return.
Critics of Biden's initial proposal to raise the corporate tax to 28% argued that it would hurt companies' competitiveness and put a damper on job creation. One important obstacle was that Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, whose vote would be necessary for passage, said he opposed any new rate higher than 25%.
So when Democratic leaders assembled the final version of the Build Back Better Act — the safety-net legislation that included many of Biden's priorities — they decided on a different mechanism.
The measure, which has passed the House and is now awaiting action in the Senate, includes some significant corporate tax provisions.
The central one is a 15% minimum tax for large corporations. Notably, it is based on a company's "book income" rather than the income reported to the IRS. The law also has some more targeted provisions that impact how multinational companies' taxes are calculated.
"Book income" is what a company reports to investors and is governed by rules known as generally accepted accounting principles. By contrast, filings to the IRS are based on the U.S. tax code.
Because these two sets of rules are structured differently, a company's book income is often different from what it reports as taxable income. Under the new proposal, if the tax calculated on the book income ended up higher than the tax calculated under the tax code, the company would be obligated to pay the higher amount.
Having two different sets of rules "helps explain why some large profitable companies pay very little in federal corporate income taxes," the Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center has written.
The minimum tax calculation would be required only for corporations with a three-year average book income above $1 billion. In 2019, the Tax Policy Center calculated, about 455 U.S. corporations reported pretax income above $1 billion.
However, some of these firms may not need to pay the minimum tax if they were already paying more under the regular income tax system.
Tax Policy Center analyses suggest that the different approaches to taxing corporations could help some sectors and hurt others. For instance, the tax code favors research and capital investments, so using a book rate tax could remove some deductions and credits from the calculation, hurting capital-intensive sectors such as utilities, transportation and manufacturing.
By contrast, companies that invest less in equipment and research would not be hit as hard.
The Senate Finance Committee "has suggested some tweaks around the edges" to what was passed in the House, "but nothing major," said John Buhl, senior communications manager for the Tax Policy Center.
Senate passage of the Build Back Better bill is far from certain, and the mechanism is different from the one Biden proposed on the campaign trail. But the bill remains in play, and the end result — higher taxes on some of the most profitable companies — would be roughly the same.
We rate the promise In the Works.
Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, "Book Minimum Tax May Discourage Investment More Than a Rate Hike," Nov. 18, 2021
Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, "What Is Biden's Minimum Book Income Tax on Corporations?," Nov. 2, 2021
PriceWaterhouse Coopers, "Senate Democrats release initial Build Back Better reconciliation tax proposals," December 2021
Email interview with John Buhl, senior communications manager for the Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center, Dec. 16, 2021
To pay for his proposal for infrastructure spending, President Joe Biden wants to raise the federal tax rate on corporations from 21% to 28%, which is in line with a promise he made on the campaign trail.
Prior to 2017, when President Donald Trump signed a tax overhaul measure, the corporate tax rate was 35%. Trump's law lowered the rate to 21%, so Biden's proposal would move it half way back to where it was.
Republicans have argued that raising the tax to 28% would hurt companies' competitiveness and put a damper on job creation. Some congressional Republicans have floated an alternative — paying for a smaller infrastructure package through user fees, such as a hike in the gasoline tax.
Further complicating passage of Biden's proposed 28% rate is that Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has already said he opposes any new rate higher than 25%. In the current 50-50 Senate, Manchin's vote would almost certainly be necessary for passage.
Biden has expressed openness to signing a bill with a rate lower than 28% if a mutually agreeable measure can be negotiated.
For these reasons, enactment of a 28% corporate tax rate faces significant legislative obstacles. However, the increase has become a key element of Biden's infrastructure proposal, which in turn is a major legislative priority for the White House.
We rate this promise In the Works.
PriceWaterhouse Coopers, "White House lists corporate tax offsets for Biden infrastructure plan," March 2021
Wall Street Journal, "Top Republican Says Senate GOP Could Be Open to Smaller Infrastructure Bill," April 18, 2021
CNBC, "Biden says higher corporate tax won't hurt economy; Manchin opposes 28% rate," April 5, 2021
CNBC, "Biden open to negotiating on corporate tax hike, but says U.S. must take bold action on infrastructure," April 7, 2021