Rep. Kevin Brady on the House Democrats’ tax plan: 'This is very bad news for the U.S. economy’

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Rep. Kevin Brady joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the proposed tax plan by the House Democrats, the $3.5T budget reconciliation bill, and outlook on the debt ceiling.

Video Transcript

- Just around 28 minutes to go until the closing bell. And you're still looking at selling across the board. Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ all in negative territory. The Dow off 193 points. Biggest laggards in the Dow today. Dow Inc., Caterpillar, Apple, Microsoft, and Goldman Sachs. Those five stocks the worst performers you're looking at. Dow Inc. off just over 3%. Caterpillar and Apple, both those stocks off nearly 2% today.

In terms of the sector action, biggest losses that we are seeing in materials, communication services, and technology. Well, investors are closely watching the developments out of DC. President Biden this week defending his plans to increase taxes on the wealthy and also raise taxes on US corporations while looking to drum up support for his economic agenda. We want to talk about the latest developments.

And for that, we want to bring in Representative Kevin Brady. He's a ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee. And Representative, it's great to see you again. Thanks so much for coming on. So since we last spoke, we got this plan from the House Democrats on exactly how they plan to pay for Biden's spending plans. And that includes the corporate tax rate, raising that to 26 and 1/2%, imposing a 3% surtax on people making over $5 million. Also increasing the capital gains taxes. I guess, what's your reaction to this and what the Democrats have put forward?

KEVIN BRADY: Yeah. This is very bad news for the US economy, both in the short term and in the long term. There's very few businesses that go unscathed here, from the corporations that compete around the world to Main Street businesses. Certainly, investors get punished in here. I think, overall, looking at the rates and their impact, we estimate up to three million US jobs could be killed, or many driven overseas, sort of going backwards to the bad tax code we had before where US companies certainly couldn't compete. And we're inverting, moving the headquarters, jobs, manufacturing, research overseas. So we think especially as our country fights to get back on our economic feet, this couldn't come at a worse time. And it's very damaging.

- We also heard from Senator Manchin this week. He's one of the Democrats that are opposed to that 3 and 1/2 trillion dollar reconciliation package that Democrats are pushing. He's looking for something that's in the ballpark of a trillion to 1 and 1/2 trillion. I guess if we do see that number come significantly lower, is there any hope or any chance that some GOP members could be on board with that?