Yahoo Finance Presents: Larry Summers, Fmr U.S. Treasury Secretary

Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger is joined by Former NEC Director & Former U.S. Treasury Secretary, Larry Summers, as they discuss the Inflation Reduction Act, inflation in the United States, and the possibility of a recession.

Video Transcript

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JENNIFER SCHONBERGER: Welcome to "Yahoo Finance Presents." I'm Jennifer Schonberger. Five former Treasury secretaries endorsing the slimmed down version of the Build Back Better Bill, now being dubbed the Inflation Reduction Act. Former Treasury secretaries Geithner, Lew, Paulson, Rubin, and Summers all saying in a statement, quote, "Taxes due or paid will not increase for any family making less than $400,000 a year." And the extra taxes levied on corporations do not reflect increases in the corporate tax rate, but rather the reclaiming of revenue lost to tax avoidance and provisions benefiting the most affluent."

Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers joins me now to discuss this. Mr. Secretary, welcome to the program. Thanks so much for being here. So the Inflation Reduction Act would impose a 15% minimum corporate tax rate on companies earning a billion dollars or more in revenues. And you say, along with a handful of former Treasury secretaries, both Democratic and Republican, in a statement today, that "the extra taxes levied on corporations do not reflect increases in the corporate tax rate, but rather the reclaiming of revenue lost to tax avoidance and provisions benefiting the most affluent."

My question is, though, how do you see this impacting job creation and business investment at a time when the economy is slowing?

LARRY SUMMERS: I don't think the effects are likely to be harmful. I think that the total effects of this bill could very likely be positive. The stimulus to renewable investment, in particular, that's given by the tax credit provisions is likely to do far more to stimulate investment than closing various loopholes, which in some cases probably encourage financial manipulation rather than real productive investments.

I don't think there's any reason at all to think that asking corporations, that report themselves as profitable every year, to pay something in taxes at a minimum rate of 15% is likely to be harmful. And, in fact, by expanding the taxation of their global income relative to their domestic income, I actually think this could encourage jobs to be brought home.

JENNIFER SCHONBERGER: Republicans have argued that the bill would break President Biden's pledge to not raise taxes on those earning $400,000 or less, based on the Joint Committee on Taxation's analysis that higher taxes paid by corporations would indirectly raise the effective tax burden on those with incomes of $200,000 or less. Your rebuttal to that?