[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 160 (Tuesday, December 7, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S8596]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TAX CUTS
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, last weekend I voted for legislation that
would extend tax cuts for all Pennsylvanians. This legislation also
included a continuation of expired unemployment insurance, a series of
tax incentives that have created jobs in Pennsylvania like the R&D tax
credit, the biodiesel tax credit which is essential to companies like
Hero BX in Erie, the new markets tax credit and the payroll tax credit
known as the HIRE Act. I also voted for permanent extensions of the
enhanced child tax credit and earned income tax credit and the expanded
adoption tax credit that I included in the health care reform law, all
of which place money back into the pockets of working people across the
Commonwealth.
According to the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue, out of 6.5
million filers in the Commonwealth in 2008, 98 percent had adjusted
gross income below $250,000. There is a consensus in Congress to extend
tax cuts for these families. We should pass the middle income tax cuts,
renew the job creation tax cuts and preserve unemployment insurance. We
can then have a debate about the upper income tax breaks without using
middle-income families and those laid off through no fault of their own
as political bargaining chips. However, a long-term extension of tax
cuts for upper income taxpayers, multimillionaires and billionaires, is
not fiscally responsible for one reason: it adds hundreds of billions
to the deficit without creating jobs or stimulating economic growth.
In recent months, I spoke to both business owners and economists to
get their views on how Congress should handle the expiring tax
provisions. What I learned is that certainty and consistency are needed
when the economy is in such a fragile condition. We must reach a
compromise. At most however, this might entail a short-term extension
of upper income tax cuts and other ideas that could bring certainty
without unduly increasing the deficit.
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