Senate OKs Its Own Bill to Cut Taxes
WASHINGTON — The Senate approved on Friday its own version of a bill providing $85 billion in net tax cuts over the next five years for families, students, home-sellers and investors, sending it to a House-Senate conference committee to find a compromise acceptable to President Clinton.
Passage of the Senate bill came on a bipartisan vote of 80 to 18 after the addition of last-minute amendments that would allow parents to use an “education savings account” to pay for private schools and would enable self-employed people to deduct the cost of health insurance.
The House passed a version of the bill on Thursday that contains essentially the same major elements, but with a few, relatively minor differences. The conference committee, which will begin work when lawmakers return from their July 4 recess, will have to reconcile those disparities.
Panel members also are expected to negotiate with officials of the Clinton administration, which has served notice that it will seek some changes. The primary objection Clinton has voiced over the bill is a provision in the House version that would permit investors to “index” their capital gains--profits from the sale of stocks or other assets--to offset the impact of inflation. The Senate bill contains no such measure and House leaders have promised that they will be flexible.
The Treasury Department is expected Monday to unveil a list of the administration’s demands.
Nevertheless, strategists predicted Friday that the lawmakers and the administration would probably reach agreement quickly, in time for Clinton to sign the bill in late July. He already has accepted the basic elements of both bills.
The tax-cut legislation--which constitutes the biggest tax reduction that Congress has enacted in 16 years--is a key component of the overall plan Clinton and Republican congressional leaders agreed to last month for balancing the budget by 2002.
The lopsided vote of approval in the Senate reflected an effort by leaders of both parties to court bipartisan support for the measure--in sharp contrast to the House, where Democrats essentially were cut out of the process of crafting the bill.
Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-N.M.), chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said after Friday’s vote that Senate leaders had become aware that voters “want to see us working together” rather than engaged in partisan wrangling. “We heard you and we acted,” he said.
Republicans sought to portray the passage of the bill as a sign that Washington had changed dramatically since the GOP took control of Congress in 1995 after having campaigned on a platform of reducing the size of government.
“The scene has changed,” said Sen. William V. Roth Jr. (R-Del.), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee. “Republicans and Democrats alike are talking about balancing the budget and cutting taxes.”
Following the parameters set by the balanced-budget accord, the House and Senate measures would provide $135 billion in tax reductions between now and 2002, offset by $50 billion in new or extended taxes, primarily on airline tickets. The Senate bill also would raise taxes on cigarettes by about 20 cents a pack over the current 24-cent-a-pack level.
The bill passed by the Senate contains these major provisions, most of which parallel those in the House version:
* A tax credit for families of up to $500 for each child under 17, aimed primarily at couples whose combined income is less than $100,000. For children between 13 and 16, the credit would go only for funds that were placed in a special education savings account.
* A tax break for homeowners who sell their principal residences, enabling them to exempt the first $500,000 in profits from capital gains taxes. The cut would apply to houses sold after May 7, 1997.
* An education tax credit of up to 50% of the first $3,000 in tuition and books for the first two years of college or up to 75% of $2,000 for community colleges. Interest on student loans would be deductible.
* A cut in capital gains taxes, reducing the top rate to 20%, from 28% now, except for profits from real-estate sales, which would be taxed at a maximum 24%.
The bill also would provide special reductions in capital gains taxes for small businesses and venture capital.
* A reduction in inheritance taxes by increasing the exemption from federal estate taxes to $1 million by 2008--up from $600,000 now--and providing an additional $1-million exemption immediately for many family-owned farms and businesses.
* Liberalization of restrictions on individual retirement accounts by increasing the income limits and creating new kinds of accounts--open to all taxpayers, no matter their income. The interest a depositor earns could be withdrawn tax free to buy a first home or to retire.
The amendments the Senate approved on Friday were relatively modest.
One, by Sen. Paul Coverdell (R-Ga.), would expand the provision in the bill that allows parents to set up special savings accounts for college tuition to use the money for tuition at private elementary and secondary schools as well.
The Senate approved the plan by a vote of 58 to 42.
A second amendment, by Sen. Don Nickles (R-Okla.), would enable self-employed people to claim tax-deductions for the money that they spend on health insurance premiums, just as employers and workers in large corporations may do.
The provision was approved by a vote of 98-0.
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