President Obama unveiled his 2013 budget proposal Monday, eliciting a chorus of cheers and jeers. Among other changes, the budget would raise rates on capital gains and dividends, close corporate loopholes, and create the Warren Buffett-inspired minimum tax on millionaires. Republicans, unsurprisingly, oppose much of the budget, and expressed their disapproval by calling it, "a recipe for a debt crisis and the decline of America."
With the president calling for changes in tax rates and new funding for certain industries, the budget, in whatever final form passes, is sure to have an effect on investors. Let's take a look at who benefits and who loses from the proposed budget.
Wealthy dividend investors
Individual dividend investors making more than $200,000 and couples earning over $250,000 would be big losers under the proposed budget. Right now, dividends are taxed at just 15%, the long-term capital gains rate, but the budget proposal would treat them as ordinary income. That would raise their effective tax rate to 43.4% on dividends, which includes a 3.8% surcharge to support the Affordable Care Act. Companies most likely to be affected would include high-dividend payer Frontier Communications
For-profit education
As a college education has become vital for young people searching for a lasting career, the for-profit education sector has sprung up to meet the huge demand that traditional institutions could not. The Apollo Group's University of Phoenix, for example, serves more than 300,000 students, and budget constraints on community colleges have fueled for-profit colleges' incredible growth. However, the for-profits' expansion has slowed in recent years and the budget's proposal to provide $8 billion for community colleges should put a further dent into their profit-seeking competitors. The funding for the community colleges would help the schools partner with local businesses to provide students with job training skills.
Defense contractors
Republicans including John McCain have vilified Obama for not preventing automatic defense cuts that are set to go into effect as a result of the supercommittee's deal on the debt ceiling. However, defense contractors have not reacted the same way. Lockheed Martin stands to lose out on the purchase of 13 of its F-35 fighter jets, but the company said it understands the government's need to be fiscally responsible. Others in the industry have said the cuts in the Pentagon budget were relatively mild.
Corporate taxes
Republicans like to cite our 35% corporate tax rate as evidence of oppressive regulation and the need to cut taxes. In reality, the average tax rate that corporations pay has sunk to 12.1%, a 40-year low. The budget proposal seeks to close the tax loopholes that allow such a low effective rate, and lower the overall corporate tax rate.
This move would favor certain businesses, especially high-margin retailers and restaurants, which don't benefit from those loopholes and therefore pay the full 35% rate. For example, in their most recent quarters, Starbucks paid a 33% tax rate, Chipotle's
Transportation
Perhaps the biggest winner in the proposed budget is the nation's transportation network. The budget includes a total of $476 billion over the next six years and an additional $50 billion for the coming fiscal year. The extra money to help repair and build infrastructure like roads and bridges figures to be a boon for machinery maker Caterpillar
Foolish takeaway
The final version of the budget will likely be some form of compromise between Republicans and the administration, but the proposals could mean an altered landscape for investors. Some other important changes in the budget include raising the capital gains rate on the highest income bracket to 20% from 15%, and eliminating the "carried interest" loophole that allows venture capital and private equity managers to pay the capital gains rate instead of having their salaries taxed as ordinary income.
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