| Oct 9, 2007
By Nedra Piclker
Associated Press
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8S5TSGG0&show_article=1
WEBSTER CITY, Iowa (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate
Hillary Rodham proposed tax cuts of up to $1,000 a year on
Tuesday to encourage millions of working-age families to open
personal 401 (K) retirement accounts.
The New York senator said the program would be paid for
through higher estate taxes.
At the same time, Clinton said she has given up another
idea for a savings incentive—giving every baby born
in the United States a $5,000 account to pay for college or
a first home.
Instead, she said, her plan for what she called "American
Retirement Accounts" will provide "universal access
to a generous 401(K) for all Americans."
She outlined a program in which the government would provide
a "matching refundable tax credit—dollar for dollar—for
the first $1,000 of savings done by every married couple making
up to $60,000 a year."
Families with incomes of up to $100,000 would receive a smaller
tax break to spur them to contribute to a personal 401(K).
"This means tens of millions of middle-class families
will get matching tax cuts of up to $500 and $1,000 to help
them build a nest egg for retirement," said a fact sheet
distributed by the campaign.
Higher income earners who don't have employer-sponsored
plans could participate, but they would not receive tax breaks
and the contributions they make would count against the IRA
contribution limit.
Clinton proposed freezing the estate tax at projected 2009
levels to pay for the tax cuts. Her campaign said that would
mean estates of more than $7 million per couple would be subject
to taxation.
At a cost of $20 billion-$25 billion a year, the plan is
Clinton's largest domestic proposal other than her plan for
universal health insurance.
Clinton first mentioned a so-called "baby bond"
last month in an appearance before the Congressional Black
Caucus, saying it was just an idea and not a policy proposal.
The idea was criticized by Republicans, and she told The Wall
Street Journal in an interview published Tuesday that it's
off the table.
The campaign of her Democratic rival John Edwards suggested
it was an example of Clinton setting her positions by polls.
"Apparently, new polling data seems to have pressured
the Clinton campaign to throw out the baby bond with the bathwater,"
said Edwards spokesman Chris Kofinis.
Clinton's campaign said that for every $7 million estate
that gets taxed, at least 5,000 families would receive the
matching funds.
The retirement account proposal would be designed for adults
of working age and not open to children, but there is no requirement
that people work to participate. The matching funds would
come in the form of a refundable tax credit that would be
deposited into the 401(k) plan.
She said she would encourage employers to have direct deposit
from paychecks into the accounts.
Clinton said less than half the families in the United States
have retirement savings accounts and those who have them aren't
saving enough. She said she often meets people working even
into their early 80s because they don't have enough savings.
"We don't have much of a nest egg to fall back on,"
she said.
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