After weeks of grandstanding, posturing, and wrangling, it looks like a bipartisan infrastructure deal that both parties can live with is in the works.
Good news: no tax hikes. But you’ll want to read on because we’re not out of the woods yet.
The bipartisan deal (can’t call it a bill yet) finds $579 billion of common ground from President Biden’s original $2.25 trillion American Jobs Plan.1
It focuses on “hard” infrastructure — such as roads, bridges, rail, and public transit projects, as well as electric vehicle infrastructure and broadband internet — that both sides can agree on.
So, is it a done deal?
Not even close.
The current framework represents a compromise that makes no one happy, and there’s still a fair bit to hammer out (including how to pay for the plan).
The deal still needs to gather broad support in both parties, especially among those who think it’s too little or too much and might seek to scuttle the whole thing.
Fortunately, it doesn’t look like higher taxes are part of the deal. Though the math looks a little fuzzy from where I’m standing, it looks like funding sources could include repurposed pandemic funding, better IRS enforcement, and possibly digging through couch cushions for spare change (joking).1
So, that means my taxes won’t go up, right?
Not so fast.
There’s another bill on the table. And it’s a $1.8 trillion doozy.2
The second bill, called the American Families Plan, focuses on so-called “human” infrastructure and contains many Democrat-backed priorities like childcare, climate change, health care, and education.3
Basically, the initiatives that couldn’t get Republican support are packaged up in a separate bill.
It looks like the Democrats are planning to pass that bill through a reconciliation process that doesn’t require Republican support to get through Congress.
Inside that bill are the tax increases we’ve been on the watch for. Higher taxes on wealthy individuals and corporations, as well as eliminating the step-up basis on inherited assets, among other tax hits.4
Since the bills are independent, it’s really not certain yet which (if either) will pass. Or when.
Will one pass and not the other? Will both grind to a halt this summer?
Hard to say.
What does all this mean?
That depends on where you’re standing. For industries expecting to benefit, it means an influx of tasty government cash.
For those worried about America’s crumbling infrastructure, it represents some critical moves in the right direction.
For those concerned about the spending spree the government’s been on (and how we’re going to pay for it all), it’s another brick in a looming wall of debt that will eventually come due.
Bottom line, it’s not nearly over yet. I strongly suspect the coming weeks will be full of more politicking, more grandstanding, and more arm twisting.
I’ll reach out when I know more.
Now, go enjoy your summer. You deserve it.
Infrastructurally yours,
Chris
Chris Mullis, Ph.D.,CDFA® Founding Partner & Financial Planner
It’s a fascinating question because it cuts right down to the question of what it means to live in an uncertain world.
Humans are wired to dislike uncertainty.1
And we’re used to a fair amount of (often unwarranted) certainty in the models and paradigms we use to make sense of the world around us.
We’re so attracted to certainty that when economic forecasts and reports come back with “surprises” (also known as being wrong) we tend to freak out.
Especially when the news trumpets every weird bit of data like it’s a huge deal.
Over the last few weeks and months, we’ve had a lot of “surprise” reports.
Inflation surprises.
Job market surprises.
Housing market surprises.
Economic growth surprises.
Why are we so surprised?
In a year like 2021, the margin for error is greater than ever.
Predictions, forecasts, and expectations that are based on averages, trends, and other backward-looking methods are ill-equipped to handle the outliers and oddities of a year that’s unlike anything that has come before.
When in history has an entire global economy simply come to a halt?
And then arthritically restarted with many creaks and groans.
To my knowledge, it’s never happened before.
Of course the data is going to have surprises.
We’re probably going to get a lot of things wrong.
I can’t wait for the best-sellers written about all the ways we could have done things better.
So. What does that mean for you and me?
Crystal balls are out of commission.
Surprise is the order of the day, the week, and the year.
The models haven’t caught up yet (though that’s not stopping anyone from issuing very confident predictions).
So we’re being careful and looking out for the opportunities (as well as the hidden pitfalls) in these uncharted waters.
We’re cultivating patience, gratitude, and our ability to make good decisions with incomplete information.
To staying frosty,
Chris
Chris Mullis, Ph.D.,CDFA® Founding Partner & Financial Planner