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Fiscal Cliff Averted

Early this morning, the Senate rang in the New Year by approving legislation to avert the economic impacts of the fiscal cliff. The bipartisan agreement makes changes to tax policy by allowing for the first income tax rate increase in nearly two decades and also delays the sequester by offering $24 billion in other spending reductions.  The House is scheduled to take up the legislation at noon today. Conservative opposition in the House has thwarted earlier fiscal cliff proposals and Republicans will likely need the support of Democrats to clear the legislation. Democratic leaders said late Monday they were still reviewing the bill, but with the White House backing it, Democrats seemed likely to favor it.

The deal agreed to in the Senate would permanently extend the 2001 and 2003 tax rates for ordinary income, capital gains, and dividends for individuals with annual incomes below $400,000 and couples with incomes below $450,000. It would preserve the current estate tax exemption and permanently prevent the alternative minimum tax (AMT) from imposing higher taxes on middle-income Americans. The agreement also retroactively renews a package of one- or two-year reauthorizations of tax extenders, including the R&D tax credit.

As for spending, the measure would delay the sequester for two months — until the beginning of March — and cover the $24 billion cost with a combination of new revenue and alternative spending cuts over a 10-year period.  The plan calls for reducing the FY2013 and FY2014 discretionary spending caps determined in the 2011 Budget Control Act (PL 112-25) by $12 billion. The spending cuts would be evenly divided between defense and non-defense spending. Another $12 billion would be new revenue generated by making it easier for owners of some tax-deferred retirement plans to switch to Roth IRAs. The two-month sequester delay is designed to give Congress more time to figure out a substitute for across-the-board cuts, which would slice $55 billion from defense, about $39 billion from domestic discretionary spending, and $16 billion from mandatory spending programs during the remaining nine months of FY2013.

While it is good that Congress is finally taking action on tax issues and averting the worse parts of the sequester, they have set themselves up for another fiscal fight in the early months of the 113th Congress. The nation will bump up against another debt ceiling limit in February and Congress will need to take legislative action at that time to increase the limit. This will certainly be another fight on reducing federal spending, and will coincide with the new deadline to prevent sequestration that the Senate approved early this morning. Additionally, Congress has yet to finalize FY2013 appropriations and it seems clear that they will approve a year-long continuing resolution (CR) when the current CR expires at the end of March. The big question yet to be answered is how spending cuts will be determined if the across-the-board cuts are to be avoided by the new end of February deadline.

STEM Jobs Act Approved

By a vote of 245 to 139, the House passed this afternoon the STEM Jobs Act (HR 6429) offered by the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Lamar Smith (R-TX).  The bill, which previously failed in September on suspension of the rules, would create 55,000 STEM visas for graduates of Carnegie Foundation rated (very high or high level) research universities with advanced degrees in STEM fields.  The bill does not include biological sciences in the definition of STEM. Unlike the prior version of the bill, it does not prohibit participation by graduates of universities that utilize commission-based international recruiters.

The bill is not expected to be taken up in the Senate in the lame-duck session so will likely die at the end of the year.

Alternative to Dream Act Introduced

As the Los Angeles Times is reporting, three republican senators introduced an alternative version of the Dream Act on Tuesday that would give legal status for young immigrants brought to the US unlawfully as children.  The effort, called the Achieve Act and launched by retiring senators Jon Kyl (R-AZ) and Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX) and supported by Arizona senator John McCain, appears to be a push to take some of the heat off of republicans on immigration.  But senate democrats, in an effort to hold their feet to the fire, won’t let the bill come to a vote during the lame duck session.

Read more at the Los Angeles Times.

Today in Congress

The Senate’s in at 10:00am and will continue work on a veterans jobs bill. A series of votes are possible. The chamber will recess from 12:30 to 2:15pm for weekly caucus lunches. Then, the senate will hold a procedural vote on the House-passed six-month continuing resolution to fund the government.

The House is in at noon with votes expected about 6:30 p.m. on nearly 30 bills, including one honoring the four Americans who died in Libya and condemning the attacks on United States diplomatic facilities in Libya, Egypt, and Yemen. Another would confirm full ownership rights for certain US astronauts to artifacts from the astronauts’ space missions.

House Approves 6-Month CR

Yesterday, the House easily passed a continuing resolution (CR) that the Senate will likely vote on next week. The House voted, 329-91, to back the CR (H J Res 117) that would fund government through March 27, 2013 at the discretionary limit set by last year’s deal to raise the federal debt ceiling (Budget Control Act), PL 112-25).

While described as a “clean” six-month extension of current funding, the House-backed measure does add billions of dollars in new spending, grants program extensions, and sets funding restrictions. Overall, the measure provides spending for the first six months of fiscal 2013 at an annualized rate of $1.047 trillion for discretionary spending, which matches the caps set in the 2011 Budget Control Act. The plan exceeds fiscal 2012 spending by $8 billion. Most of the discretionary increase ($5.937 billion) would be appropriated in a .621 percent across-the-board increase covering all 12 annual spending bills, with the remainder, $1.992 billion, marked for specific programs. The remaining funding would go toward, among other projects, nuclear weapons modernization at the Energy Department, cybersecurity efforts at Homeland Security, wildfire suppression efforts at Interior and the Forest Service, and disability claims processing at Veterans Affairs.

Source: Congressional Quarterly