Factbox-What we know about Kamala Harris’ economic plans on taxes, housing and manufacturing

(Reuters) -U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris has announced a series of economic proposals aimed at lowering the cost of living for middle- and lower-class Americans and boosting the broader economy by leveraging of tax incentives and other tax shifts.

Some of her ideas build on unfinished business in President Joe Biden’s economic agenda, but expand their scope and scale.

Here’s what we know so far:

INDUSTRIAL INCENTIVES

Harris on Wednesday pledged new tax credits to spur more domestic manufacturing and invest in sectors that will “define the next century,” including biomanufacturing, space travel, artificial intelligence, quantum computing and blockchain, advanced nuclear energy and batteries.

She also said she would offer tax breaks for expanding “good union jobs” in longstanding iron, steel, coal and other traditional industrial communities. Details on the size and scope of the incentives and investments have not been disclosed.

Harris announced new investments in U.S. basic technology research through the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy’s National Laboratories and other agencies.

She also announced plans to cut red tape to accelerate construction of new infrastructure and industrial projects and to use the Defense Production Act and other tools to increase U.S. capacity to process critical minerals and reduce dependence on reduce deliveries from China.

TAX ON THE RICH

Harris has reiterated Biden’s pledge not to raise taxes on households making less than $400,000 a year.

She quietly approved most of the nearly $5 trillion in tax increases over the past decade in Biden’s 2025 budget proposal, which would raise the top income tax rate from 37% to 39.6%.

These include a new minimum tax of 25% on people with fortunes of more than $100 million, including on unrealized capital gains. For those earning more than $1 million annually, Harris has proposed raising the long-term capital gains tax rate paid after selling assets like stocks from 20% to 28%, an increase that is much smaller than Biden’s proposed full income tax rate of 39.6%. .

TAX ON BUSINESS

Harris has proposed raising the corporate tax rate to 28%, partially reversing former president and Republican rival Donald Trump’s 2017 tax law, which cut corporate tax rates from 35% to 21%. The move would save the federal government $1 trillion over 10 years, budget experts estimate, but would cut corporate profits, Wall Street says.

Large U.S. companies pay a much lower effective tax rate than their foreign competitors, an average of 16%, a Reuters analysis found. Any broad corporate tax change would have to be passed by Congress.

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