Tax cut talks: What's at stake

@CNNMoney February 14, 2012: 5:39 PM ET
Payroll tax cut: What's at stake

Eric Cantor and John Boehner face a tough sell to conservative members of the House.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The current Congress has a habit of lurching from crisis to crisis, usually reaching a deal to avoid the unpleasantness du jour just before time runs out.

They're at it again.

This time the fight is over the extension of three key policy items: The payroll tax cut, unemployment insurance and a scheduled pay cut to Medicare physicians.

The deadline is just two weeks away, and congressional negotiators are rushing to cobble together a deal, while duking it out over how to pay for the measures.

By late Tuesday, it appeared that negotiators were making progress, but a few stumbling blocks remain. (Read the latest at CNNPolitics)

Here is what's at stake:

Payroll tax cut: Allowing the tax cut to lapse would affect 160 million U.S. workers.

The tax cut reduces how much workers pay into Social Security, thereby increasing their take-home pay. While normally they would have to pay 6.2% on the first $110,100 of their income, the measure would maintain that rate at 4.2%.

So a person making $50,000 would get to keep an extra $1,000 a year -- or $83 a month -- as a result.

CNN Poll: Majority favor payroll tax cut

It would cost around $100 billion for a 10-month extension.

Not everyone in Congress is in love with the idea of extending the measure.

Douglas Elmendorf, director of the Congressional Budget Office, told Congress earlier this month that extending the payroll tax cut for 2012 could add 0.25% to the gross domestic product by the end of the year and reduce the unemployment rate by one- to two-tenths of a percent.

Unemployment insurance: The federal government has provided the unemployed an unprecedented amount of support during the Great Recession.

The jobless can receive up to 73 weeks of federal extended unemployment benefits once their state checks, which last up to 26 weeks, run out.

Federal benefits have been lengthened or extended nine times since they were authorized in June 2008. Now they have to be extended again.

If Congress fails to extend unemployment insurance, more than 3.3 million Americans would lose benefits by the first week of June, according to an estimate from the Joint Economic Committee.

And the economy at large might take a hit.

Economists generally rate unemployment benefits as an effective economic stimulus, as out of work individuals are very likely to spend benefits they receive in the marketplace.

Each dollar of unemployment insurance collected pumps about $2 into the economy, according to some estimates.

Doc fix: The other big to-do item on Congress' list is preventing a scheduled pay cut to physicians who treat patients with Medicare.

Without action, those docs will be in line for a 27% cut in payments.

Under the law, Medicare reimbursements to doctors must be reduced whenever those payments exceed a certain target. Since 2003, that target has been exceeded, but Congress has routinely prevented those pay cuts.

Many in Congress would like to pass a permanent doc fix, but the biggest stumbling block to doing so is figuring how to pay for the estimated $300 billion cost over the first decade. To top of page

Most Popular
New York penthouse sells for a record $90 million
 
Vacation? No thanks, boss
 
Facebook trading sets record IPO volume
 
Inside New York's most expensive apartment
 
Why I don't take vacation
 
Overnight Avg Rate Latest Change Last Week
30 yr fixed3.80%3.76%
15 yr fixed3.11%3.02%
5/1 ARM2.69%2.68%
30 yr refi3.86%3.83%
15 yr refi3.21%3.13%
Rate data provided
by Bankrate.com
View rates in your area
 
Find personalized rates:
Economic Calendar
Latest ReportNext Update
Inflation (CPI)May 15
Retail salesMay 15
Home PricesMay 29
Consumer ConfidenceMay 29
GDPMay 31
JobsJun 1
Manufacturing (ISM)Jun 1
Hot List
New York penthouse sells for a record $90 million

An unnamed buyer paid more than $90 million for a Manhattan penthouse, the highest price ever paid for a New York apartment, according to the developer.  More

What Zuckerberg & Co. are worth

From founder Mark Zuckerberg to Facebook's earliest investors, here's a guide to what Facebook's key players are now worth. More

'Why I don't take vacation'

Unlike many other nations, the U.S. does not require companies to offer paid time off to workers. But many Americans who are offered vacation don't take it. More

Thrilled and bummed by Google's self-driving car

The technology is tantalizing, but not ready for the wider world, just yet. More

Home is where the airplane hangar is 

At Cameron Airpark Estates, a community of pilots and air enthusiasts, every home has a hangar and aircraft have the right of way. Play

CNNMoney Sponsors
Market indexes are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaimer LIBOR Warning: Neither BBA Enterprises Limited, nor the BBA LIBOR Contributor Banks, nor Reuters, can be held liable for any irregularity or inaccuracy of BBA LIBOR. Disclaimer. Morningstar: © 2012 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer The Dow Jones IndexesSM are proprietary to and distributed by Dow Jones & Company, Inc. and have been licensed for use. All content of the Dow Jones IndexesSM © 2012 is proprietary to Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Chicago Mercantile Association. The market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved. FactSet Research Systems Inc. 2012. All rights reserved. Most stock quote data provided by BATS.