What's in Biden's landmark climate & healthcare bill?

Cypress

Well-known member
What's in Biden's big climate and health bill?

Hundreds of billions of dollars for clean energy projects, cheaper prescription drugs and new corporate taxes are a few of the key items in US President Joe Biden's massive investment plan, which the Senate will begin debating on Saturday.

Here's a closer look at the signature elements of the plan, which could offer the Democratic leader a big political win heading into November's crucial midterm elections.

--$370 billion for clean energy, climate--
If the legislation is passed, it will mark the biggest investment in US history in the fight against climate change.

Rather than attempting to punish the biggest polluters in corporate America, the bill put forward by Biden's party instead proposes a series of financial incentives aimed at steering the world's biggest economy away from fossil fuels.

Tax credits would be given to producers and consumers of wind, solar and nuclear power.

If passed, the legislation would allot up to $7,500 in tax credits to every American who buys an electric vehicle. Anyone installing solar panels on their roof would see 30 percent of the cost subsidized.

Around $60 billion would be allocated for clean energy manufacturing, from wind turbines to the processing of minerals needed for electric car batteries.

The same amount would go towards programs to help drive investment in underprivileged communities, notably through grants for home renovation to improve energy efficiency and access to less polluting modes of transportation.

Huge investments would go into making forests less susceptible to wildfires and protect coastal areas from erosion caused by devastating hurricanes.

The bill aims to help the United States reduce its carbon emissions by 40 percent by 2030, as compared with 2005 levels.

--$64 billion for health care--
The second major aspect of the legislation is to help reduce the huge disparities in access to health care across the United States, notably by reining in skyrocketing prescription drug prices.

If the draft eventually becomes law, Medicare -- the nation's health insurance plan for those aged 65 and older, or with modest incomes -- could be permitted to negotiate prices of certain medications directly with Big Pharma for the first time, likely yielding far better deals.

The plan would require pharmaceutical companies to offer rebates on certain drugs if the prices rise faster than soaring US inflation.

It also would extend benefits under Barack Obama's signature Affordable Care Act -- known colloquially as Obamacare -- until 2025.

--Minimum corporate tax of 15%--
Alongside these huge investments, the so-called Inflation Reduction Act would seek to pare down the federal deficit through the adoption of a minimum corporate tax of 15 percent for all companies with profits exceeding one billion dollars.

The new tax seeks to prevent certain huge firms from using tax havens to pay far less than what they theoretically owe.

According to estimates, the measure could generate more than $258 billion in tax revenue for US government coffers over the next 10 years.

U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) Friday afternoon posted an angry tweet complaining he will be missing his annual family reunion this weekend after Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer scheduled a vote on the Inflation Reduction Act, major, historic legislation to combat inflation and climate change, lower Medicare prescription drug prices and the federal deficit, and increase the energy supply.


https://www.rawstory.com/what-s-in-biden-s-big-climate-and-health-bill-2657818066/
 
besides higher taxes and inflation ?
job losses and higher prices to pay business taxes (unless you are a Wall Street fat cat)
more green pork
more IRS auditors (80k+ they're coming after you small businesses)
and, of course, more debt (after 3 years when they extend the spending part)

if you dont like the current inflation, wait till you see it pumped up with this !
 
besides higher taxes and inflation ?
job losses and higher prices to pay business taxes (unless you are a Wall Street fat cat)
more green pork
more IRS auditors (80k+ they're coming after you small businesses)
and, of course, more debt (after 3 years when they extend the spending part)

if you dont like the current inflation, wait till you see it pumped up with this !

I have been hearing for the last 20 months that Biden has us on the cusp of a deep recession.
 
Hello Cypress,

What's in Biden's big climate and health bill?

Hundreds of billions of dollars for clean energy projects, cheaper prescription drugs and new corporate taxes are a few of the key items in US President Joe Biden's massive investment plan, which the Senate will begin debating on Saturday.

Here's a closer look at the signature elements of the plan, which could offer the Democratic leader a big political win heading into November's crucial midterm elections.

--$370 billion for clean energy, climate--
If the legislation is passed, it will mark the biggest investment in US history in the fight against climate change.

Rather than attempting to punish the biggest polluters in corporate America, the bill put forward by Biden's party instead proposes a series of financial incentives aimed at steering the world's biggest economy away from fossil fuels.

Tax credits would be given to producers and consumers of wind, solar and nuclear power.

If passed, the legislation would allot up to $7,500 in tax credits to every American who buys an electric vehicle. Anyone installing solar panels on their roof would see 30 percent of the cost subsidized.

Around $60 billion would be allocated for clean energy manufacturing, from wind turbines to the processing of minerals needed for electric car batteries.

The same amount would go towards programs to help drive investment in underprivileged communities, notably through grants for home renovation to improve energy efficiency and access to less polluting modes of transportation.

Huge investments would go into making forests less susceptible to wildfires and protect coastal areas from erosion caused by devastating hurricanes.

The bill aims to help the United States reduce its carbon emissions by 40 percent by 2030, as compared with 2005 levels.

--$64 billion for health care--
The second major aspect of the legislation is to help reduce the huge disparities in access to health care across the United States, notably by reining in skyrocketing prescription drug prices.

If the draft eventually becomes law, Medicare -- the nation's health insurance plan for those aged 65 and older, or with modest incomes -- could be permitted to negotiate prices of certain medications directly with Big Pharma for the first time, likely yielding far better deals.

The plan would require pharmaceutical companies to offer rebates on certain drugs if the prices rise faster than soaring US inflation.

It also would extend benefits under Barack Obama's signature Affordable Care Act -- known colloquially as Obamacare -- until 2025.

--Minimum corporate tax of 15%--
Alongside these huge investments, the so-called Inflation Reduction Act would seek to pare down the federal deficit through the adoption of a minimum corporate tax of 15 percent for all companies with profits exceeding one billion dollars.

The new tax seeks to prevent certain huge firms from using tax havens to pay far less than what they theoretically owe.

According to estimates, the measure could generate more than $258 billion in tax revenue for US government coffers over the next 10 years.

U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) Friday afternoon posted an angry tweet complaining he will be missing his annual family reunion this weekend after Democratic Majority Leader Chuck Schumer scheduled a vote on the Inflation Reduction Act, major, historic legislation to combat inflation and climate change, lower Medicare prescription drug prices and the federal deficit, and increase the energy supply.


https://www.rawstory.com/what-s-in-biden-s-big-climate-and-health-bill-2657818066/

Bring it on!

I want all of that.

Talk about making America great. That's a big step in the right direction.

Corporate taxes are too low. Those big corporations are ripping us off. Prices for everything we need have gone up like crazy, but the wages paid to the workers bringing us all that stuff have not. Big corporations are making windfall profits off this 'inflation.' Actually it's really only for needs, I've noticed. Extravagances are often the same price they were before 'inflation.' And the changes in the price of gas do not reflect the changes in the price of a barrel of oil.

Big corporation profits are skyrocketing right now. The stock market is up. The rich are making a killing off 'inflation.'

We need to tax the living daylights out of them and use it to build America back better.
 
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besides higher taxes and inflation ?
job losses and higher prices to pay business taxes (unless you are a Wall Street fat cat)
more green pork
more IRS auditors (80k+ they're coming after you small businesses)
and, of course, more debt (after 3 years when they extend the spending part)

if you dont like the current inflation, wait till you see it pumped up with this !

Dude


Your predictions always fail


I’ve seen you here for years


You NEVER turn out to be correct


Why should ANYONE listen to you?
 
Americans love these ideas when they are presented to them



Republican lies are crashing fast with Americans


Except the racist ones
 
I have been hearing for the last 20 months that Biden has us on the cusp of a deep recession.

They tried to "redefine" recession so folks like you can pretend that we aren't in one. Do you believe that the definition is different for Brandon than it was for Bush? If you do, then you too may be a Democrat.
 
Around $60 billion would be allocated for clean energy manufacturing, from wind turbines to the processing of minerals needed for electric car batteries.
ALL of that is supplied by Chinese manufacturers/mineral processing
( we have some mines but cant process rare earths)

It's a tax and spend boondoggle that does nothing to grow GDP or wealth for the USA.
Instead it's a transfer of wealth to China..

Dems are economic illiterates: tax and spending reduces inflation?? :palm: it's ludicrous
 
They tried to "redefine" recession so folks like you can pretend that we aren't in one. Do you believe that the definition is different for Brandon than it was for Bush? If you do, then you too may be a Democrat.

We need more of these "recessions" where unemployment is 3.5 percent, and there are more job openings than people to fill them
 
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ALL of that is supplied by Chinese manufacturers/mineral processing
( we have some mines but cant process rare earths)

It's a tax and spend boondoggle that does nothing to grow GDP or wealth for the USA.
Instead it's a transfer of wealth to China..

Dems are economic illiterates: tax and spending reduces inflation?? :palm: it's ludicrous

I am not enough of an expert on the mining and processing of rare earth metals to posture as qualified to pass judgement.

We definetly should join nations like China and Germany in making major public investments in clean energy manufacturing.
 
We need more of these "recessions" where unemployment is 3.5 percent, and there are more job openings than people to fill them

No, we don't. Inflation above 9% is never good, Jimmy Carter proved that one. We need recovery where inflation doesn't steal the real wages of those in the poorest jobs.

There may be a temporary bump because they see you waving your arms now and think you are alive, but when they realize they are poorer than ever there will be a red wave like none you have seen since Reagan's second term. Again, you get to pretend that things are going great, but the real world is still happening. If you really believe that 10% inflation is "great" because everybody has more than one job you must be a democrat. Everyone else knows that it sucks.
 
The oil and gas industry initially criticized the methane fee as it appeared in the Build Back Better bill as heaping undue financial burden on the sector. Fletcher and Veasey, who both sit on the influential Energy and Commerce Committee, wrote to party leaders last September echoing industry complaints.

“The tax changes being proposed will further cut domestic production and endanger domestic refining capacity while increasing demand from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries,” the Democrats wrote to House Democratic leadership on Sept. 13. Cuellar and Gonzalez also signed the letter, along with Allred; Rep. Sylvia Garcia, D-Houston; and then- Rep. Filemon Vela, D-Brownsville.

Several of the biggest oil and gas industry groups, including the American Gas Association and the Independent Petroleum Association of America, sent a similar letter to congressional leadership about the methane fee the same day.
https://www.texastribune.org/2022/08/06/texas-democrats-climate-oil-gas-ira/
 
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