The Economic Impact Payment, also called stimulus payments, are automatically paid to eligible US residents through direct deposit and the mail. The IRS has started to mail $1,200 stimulus checks.

According to the Taxpayer Advocate Service, “The IRS is playing a central role in administering the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act and other federal relief efforts, most notably by issuing Economic Impact Payments (EIPs) to more than 150 million individuals.”

“One month after the enactment of the CARES Act, the IRS has issued 122 million payments for a total of 207 billion dollars.” In the last two months, Congress passed $3.6 trillion in stimulus spending. Depending upon the impact of the pandemic in the coming weeks, further relief might be extended.

With the deficit running at least $3.7 trillion in 2020, the highest since World War II, whether to spend more on stimulus payments or not is a matter of debate. Yahoo Finance talks about the impact of the present situation on the deficit and the ways it can be reduced:

“Budget hawks have typically called for a combination of tax hikes and spending cuts to lower Washington’s mushrooming debt load. But the federal deficit is now getting too big for conventional therapy, which could require a whole new form of taxation in the future. ‘When we look back at the changes COVID-19 made to society and the economy, we may think about this as the time when the U.S. began to look to sources of tax revenue that once seemed unthinkable,’ Howard Gleckman of the Tax Policy Institute” wrote recently.

The United States has been able to run up more debt than economists once thought possible without forcing interest rates or inflation higher. But tough choices were always inevitable, and they’re now likely to arrive within the next 5 years. It doesn’t make sense to raise taxes in a severe recession, but it may be necessary when the economy is back on track in a year or two or three.

Medicare, the health insurance program for seniors, could” run short of money in 2023 or sooner, as the payroll taxes that finance the program plunge amid record unemployment. The whole program wouldn’t go bust, but it would pay only a portion of the cost for services. Social Security could” run short of money by 2028, for the same reason, with the smaller disability insurance program running short by 2024.

Congress could shore up both programs by hiking the payroll taxes that finance them. But bigger changes may be brewing as policymakers contemplate additional stimulus that could be needed in coming years to keep consumers and businesses afloat, and the eventual need to repay at least some of the new debt Uncle Sam is taking on. Here are some options:

Repeal the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.” This was a” landmark tax cut” for Republicans who ran Congress at the time, and it would probably take Democratic majorities in both houses, along with a Democratic president, to repeal the whole law or even part of it. If the corporate rate went back to 35% from the current 21%, and tax rates rose for most Americans who got a tax cut under the law, it would only raise about $1.5 trillion, which is $1 trillion less than the increase in U.S. debt in the last two months alone.

A value-added tax.” This may be the most efficient way to raise a lot of money quickly. Most advanced nations have a VAT, which is like a national sales” tax imposed at various points in the production of goods and services. A 10% VAT would raise around $1 trillion per year, and Congress could design it with protections for lower-income Americans, small businesses and other vulnerable groups. Former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang proposed a 10% VAT as a way to pay for $1,200 monthly ‘freedom dividends’ to every adult American.

A wealth tax.” Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren have both proposed annual taxes on the wealth of rich people who earn most of their money from investments taxed at a lower rate than ordinary labor. Both dropped out of the Democratic presidential race as the more moderate Joe Biden became the front-runner, suggesting these” tax-the-rich plans” didn’t have wide appeal. But that could change. ‘What was considered a fringe idea of the far political left now may attract more attention from mainstream policymakers,’ writes Gleckman.

Higher inheritance taxes.” The average federal tax on estates big enough to face taxation is just 2.1%, and loopholes provide many ways to lower that. The Brookings Institution’s Hamilton Project proposes taxing inherited wealth at the” same rate as labor income, with an exemption threshold of $1 million or more that would exclude most families. With the top income tax rate at 37%, an inheritance tax at that level would raise around $92 billion per year.

Joe Biden’s tax plan.” Biden’s” major proposals” include higher tax rates on corporate income, wealthy taxpayers, capital gains and other changes that would raise around $400 billion per year. Before the coronavirus recession, Biden wanted to use that money to open Medicare to more people, help some students pay down debt and cover the cost of college, and aggressively address global warming. But suddenly $400 billion a year doesn’t seem like all that much money. So expect some updates and some bigger numbers.”

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