A federal budget deal to avoid the fiscal cliff can be achieved without
raising tax rates, Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl said Friday on the Kudlow
Report.
“Tax revenues can be generated by two ways other than raising tax rates,” he
said. “One is to eliminate some of the deductions, credits, exemptions,
special provisions in the code that end up producing more revenue but
without affecting the rates. And the other is through economic growth.”
The senator from Arizona said he thought it likely a deal could be struck to avoid the so-called “fiscal cliff,” a deadline by which the lack of a federal budget would result in the expiration of the Bush tax cuts and trigger automatic spending cuts.
Kyl sees additional revenues as the key.
The senator from Arizona said he thought it likely a deal could be struck to avoid the so-called “fiscal cliff,” a deadline by which the lack of a federal budget would result in the expiration of the Bush tax cuts and trigger automatic spending cuts.
Kyl sees additional revenues as the key.
“If we can focus, not on tax rates, but to give the president something that he
wants, more tax revenues, as I said, there are ways to get more tax
revenues,” he said. “Either through and/or producing more wealth as a
country, thus resulting in more taxes paid to the government.”
The Republican senator also took issue with the recommendations of the
special committee co-chaired by former Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., and
former Clinton White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles.
“Simpson-Bowles is not a good template here because it sets up a contest
between lowering marginal tax rates and raising the business taxes, that is to
say, dividends, capital gains and the estate tax,” he said. “Simpson-Bowles
in effect says, you can have lower rates on one side or another, but not both.
That’s not good.”