• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Biden Budget Lays Out Battle Lines Against Trump

Biden Budget Lays Out Battle Lines Against Trump

March 13, 2024
An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

May 13, 2025
Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

May 13, 2025
President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

May 13, 2025
In Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s Trial, CassieIs the Star Witness

In Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’s Trial, CassieIs the Star Witness

May 13, 2025
Carvana, a Used Car Retailer, Thinks Tariffs Could be Good for Business

Carvana, a Used Car Retailer, Thinks Tariffs Could be Good for Business

May 13, 2025
Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

May 13, 2025
German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

May 13, 2025
Trump Signs Executive Order Asking Companies to Lower Drug Prices

Trump Signs Executive Order Asking Companies to Lower Drug Prices

May 12, 2025
‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

May 12, 2025
Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

May 12, 2025
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial Live Updates: Opening Statements Begin in Sex-Trafficking Case

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Trial Live Updates: Opening Statements Begin in Sex-Trafficking Case

May 12, 2025
For Trump, It’s a New Era of Deal-Making With Tech’s Most-Coveted Commodity

For Trump, It’s a New Era of Deal-Making With Tech’s Most-Coveted Commodity

May 12, 2025
Real Bulletin
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • World
    President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

    President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

    German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

    German Companies Grow Wary of Investing in the U.S.

    Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

    Trump’s No. 1 Fan in Greenland: A Bricklayer Turned Political Player

    U.S. and China Reach Deal to Temporarily Slash Tariffs

    U.S. and China Reach Deal to Temporarily Slash Tariffs

    Trump Heads to the Middle East Focused on Business Deals, Not Diplomacy

    Trump Heads to the Middle East Focused on Business Deals, Not Diplomacy

    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

    Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

    ‘Don’t Need a Deal’: Top Trump Economic Adviser Is All In on His China Hardball

    ‘Don’t Need a Deal’: Top Trump Economic Adviser Is All In on His China Hardball

    Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump Plans for Mass Layoffs and Program Closures

    Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump Plans for Mass Layoffs and Program Closures

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Health
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
    Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

    Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

    ‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

    ‘The Interview’: Can Whitney Wolfe Herd Make Us Love Dating Apps Again?

    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    How Misinformation and Partisan ‘New Media’ Changed a California Town

    How Misinformation and Partisan ‘New Media’ Changed a California Town

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Travel
    Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

    Kim Kardashian Testifies in Paris Robbery Trial Decked Out in Diamonds

    Bill Belichick’s Girlfriend Jordon Hudson Competes in Miss Maine USA Pageant

    Bill Belichick’s Girlfriend Jordon Hudson Competes in Miss Maine USA Pageant

    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    I Prayed After My Friend Was Swept Away on a Lagos Beach

    I Prayed After My Friend Was Swept Away on a Lagos Beach

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
    • Arts
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Real Bulletin
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

Biden Budget Lays Out Battle Lines Against Trump

by editor
March 13, 2024
in Economy
0
Biden Budget Lays Out Battle Lines Against Trump
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


President Biden in his budget this week staked out major economic battle lines with former President Donald J. Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. The proposal offers the nation a glimpse of the diverging directions that retirement programs, taxes, trade and energy policy could take depending on the outcome of the November election.

During the past three years, Mr. Biden has enacted key pieces of legislation aimed at bolstering the green energy economy, making infrastructure investments and reinforcing America’s domestic supply chain with subsidies for microchips, solar technology and electric vehicles. Few of those priorities are shared by Mr. Trump, who has pledged to cut more taxes and erect new trade barriers if re-elected.

The inflection point will be arriving as the economy enters the final stretch of what economists are now expecting to be a “soft landing” after two years of high inflation. However, the prospect of a second Trump administration has injected increased uncertainty into the economic outlook, as companies and policymakers around the world brace for what could be a dramatic shift in the economic stewardship of the United States.

Here are some of the most striking differences in the economic policies of the two presidential candidates.

Sparring over the social safety net

At first glance, Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump might appear to have similar positions on the nation’s social safety net programs. In 2016, Mr. Trump broke with his fellow Republicans and refused to support cuts to Social Security or Medicare. Mr. Biden has long insisted that the programs should be protected and has hammered Republicans who have suggested cutting or scaling back the programs.

In his budget proposal on Monday, Mr. Biden reiterated his commitment to preserving the nation’s entitlement system. He called for new efforts to improve the solvency of Social Security and Medicare, including making wealthy Americans pay more into the health program. However, his plans were light on details regarding how to ensure both programs’ long-term sustainability.

Separately on Monday, Mr. Trump appeared to suggest that he was open to entitlement cuts. He said on CNBC that there is “a lot you can do in terms of entitlements in terms of cutting and in terms of also the theft and the bad management of entitlements, tremendous bad management of entitlements.”

The Trump campaign clarified that the former president was referring to cutting waste, but the Biden campaign seized on the comment. It quickly released an advertisement contrasting Mr. Trump’s remarks with Mr. Biden’s vow at the State of the Union to stop anyone who tries to cut Social Security or Medicare or raise the retirement age.

Although Mr. Trump never signed cuts to Social Security or Medicare as president, he has previously flirted with the idea. Asked about entitlements cuts in a CNBC interview in 2020, he said, “At the right time, we will take a look at that.”

To tax or not to tax?

One of the biggest contrasts between Mr. Biden and Mr. Trump revolves around who — if anyone — should pay more in taxes.

The president proposed more than $5 trillion in tax increases on corporations and the wealthy this week, including a new 25 percent minimum tax on the wealthiest Americans and an increase in the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent.

Mr. Biden paired his proposed tax increases on the wealthy with tax relief for the middle class. He called for an expansion of the child tax credit, which many Republicans have opposed, broadening eligibility for the earned-income tax credit and new tax credits that aim to make housing more affordable for first-time buyers.

Mr. Trump signed into law the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which included nearly $2 trillion in tax cuts, much of which benefited companies and the rich. Many of those tax cuts expire in 2025, meaning that whoever is president will have a big say in whether they are extended or allowed to sunset.

Mr. Biden wants to roll back much of the 2017 law, except for the parts that benefit taxpayers earning less than $400,000.

Mr. Trump has offered few specifics about his tax plans, but suggested at a rally in February that he envisioned another round of cuts.

“You’re all getting the biggest tax cuts because we’re doing additional cuts and a brand-new Trump economic boom like you’ve never seen before,” Mr. Trump said.

Speaking to CNBC on Monday, Mr. Trump said it would be “very bad for this country” if the Trump tax cuts were not extended.

The Friendshorer vs. the Tariff Man

While Democrats and Republicans have become more polarized in recent years, trade policy is one of the few areas where views seem to have converged.

For all their differences, Mr. Biden has largely left the trade agenda that Mr. Trump handed to him intact. The tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese imports that Mr. Trump imposed have yet to be rolled back, Mr. Biden has intensified scrutiny of Chinese investments in the United States and of American investment in China, and the Biden administration’s industrial policy has rankled relations with some European countries.

If he is re-elected, Mr. Biden is likely to continue his policy of deepening trade ties with American allies — a policy referred to as friendshoring — and reducing supply chain reliance on adversaries such as China. The Biden administration is expected to complete a review of the China tariffs in the coming months and could reduce some levies on consumer products and raise others that would further protect the burgeoning U.S. electric vehicle sector.

Mr. Trump has indicated that he is gearing up for a new round of trade wars. The former president and self-proclaimed “Tariff Man” has discussed imposing a 10 percent tariff on all imports in a second term and a tariff of 60 percent or more on Chinese goods.

Clashing on clean energy

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 has become Mr. Biden’s signature piece of legislation and its future — and the trajectory of U.S. climate policy — depends on who wins the election.

Mr. Biden’s economic team has been racing to roll out regulations associated with the tax and climate law to entrench investments in clean energy and the electric vehicle supply chain into the economy. The Biden administration hopes that the law could prove to be enduring because many of these investments are being made in states that are led by Republicans.

However, Mr. Trump, who has long derided electric vehicles as overpriced, underpowered and a threat to American jobs, should not be counted on to embrace much of the law if elected.

“We are a nation whose leaders are demanding all electric cars, despite the fact that they don’t go far, cost too much and whose batteries are produced in China,” Mr. Trump said at a rally in New Hampshire in January.

The former president, who pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement, is also unlikely to prioritize other clean energy investments.

For years, Mr. Trump has argued that solar power is ineffective and that wind turbines are responsible for the slaughter of birds.


Source: nytimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
editor

editor

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

January 20, 2022
Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

January 20, 2022
Rihanna showcases rising child bump

Rihanna showcases rising child bump

February 14, 2022
An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

0

With 150 million daily active users, Instagram Stories is launching ads

0

Washington prepares for Donald Trump’s big moment

0
An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

An L.A. Doctor’s House Burned. Now He Treats the Fires’ Effects in Neighbors.

May 13, 2025
Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm Made $198 Million Selling Stock as Profit Fell

May 13, 2025
President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

President Trump Gets Lavish Welcome in Saudi Arabia for Middle East Visit: Live Updates

May 13, 2025
Real Bulletin

Copyright © 2024

Navigate Site

  • About Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts

Copyright © 2024

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?