Will Taxes Rise in the U.S.?

Although the ink on the $1.85 trillion COVID relief bill, “American Rescue Plan,” is hardly dry, many investors understandably are focused on what is next – and specifically on potential tax increases in the U.S. While work has not started in earnest on a tax bill – or on an infrastructure bill that tax changes would likely fund – we believe taxes will probably increase, with several important caveats.

First, we do not see a tax bill passing until later this year at the earliest and, as a result, we see tax changes being prospective, not retroactive, with changes implemented for 2022 at the earliest. We also expect tax changes to be significantly more surgical than the broad-based changes that then-candidate Joe Biden laid out on the campaign trail. And of course, there is a risk that the razor thin majority in the U.S. Senate, not to mention the narrow Democratic majority in the House, could make passage tougher, if not impossible, especially as we get closer to the 2022 midterms.

What tax changes do we expect?

Individual taxes

    • Individual tax rates: Raising taxes on high earners ($400,000 and above), most likely to 39.6%, is low-hanging fruit, and we should expect that to be included in any tax package that gets traction.
    • SALT relief: At the same time, we expect some relief as it relates to the state and local tax deduction (SALT). We could see either an increase in the current cap of $10,000 or a full reinstatement of the SALT deduction (although it is expensive), but either way, we are confident that if a tax bill gets traction, there will be some SALT relief – one simply has to look at Democratic leadership, namely Speaker Pelosi from California and Senate Leader Schumer from New York to understand that it will be a high priority.
    • Estate tax, step-up and capital gains changes: We could see changes to how inherited wealth and investment income are taxed, but changes to these provisions may be harder to get the unanimity among Democrats required to pass. We could see the estate tax exemption decline from its current $11.7 million, but it is unlikely to decline to the $3.5 million level that the Biden campaign plan proposed. Eliminating the step-up in basis for inherited wealth also has support among Democrats and could be phased-out.

      We could also see changes in capital gains rates on investment income for those making more than $1 million, but we do not believe they would rise to the level of ordinary income rates (e.g., to 39.6%); more realistically, we think the rate would land in the upper-20% range and it could be phased in.
  • Wealth tax and financial transaction tax (FTT): While these provisions may be in the conversation initially, we do not expect either a wealth tax or FTT to be included in a final tax bill.