Almost £370bn of tax rises and spending cuts will to come into force on 1 January if a deal is not agreed
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has warned that the United States
looks to be headed over the “fiscal cliff” of tax hikes and spending
cuts that will start next week if squabbling politicians do not reach a
deal.
Reid, the top Democrat in Congress, criticized
Republicans for refusing to go along with any tax increases as part of a
budget remedy as he sketched out a pessimistic outlook.
"It
looks like that is where we're headed," Reid said of the likelihood of
the US economy going over the "fiscal cliff" - with tax increases on
most working Americans and automatic spending cuts kicking in next
month.
Reid made his comments in a Senate floor
speech at the opening of a post-Christmas session, adding that time was
running out ahead of a December 31 deadline to act to avert the
"fiscal cliff."
Reid urged House of Representatives
Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, to bring his
chamber back into session and to avoid the biggest impact of the
"fiscal cliff" by passing a Democratic-backed bill extending low income
tax rates for all Americans except those with net household incomes
above $250,000 a year.
House Republicans are expected
to hold a telephone conference call on the fiscal cliff on Thursday
afternoon, a House Republican aide said, adding that a schedule for
returning to Washington would be discussed.
Should
Congress fail to act by December 31, tax rates for all Americans would
snap sharply higher, back to pre-2001 levels, and two days later, $109
billion in automatic spending cuts would start to take effect. Together,
the higher taxes and lower spending would suck about $600 billion
(£370bn) out of the US economy, potentially causing a new recession in
2013.
On Wednesday, it was Boehner who urged the
Democratic-controlled Senate to act first to avoid the fiscal cliff,
offering to at least consider anything that the Senate produced.
Reid
returned the volley on Thursday, saying that the Senate had already
acted, and the Democrats' solution needs the consent of both Boehner and
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.
Reid said
Boehner "has just a few days left to change his mind" on the Senate
bill. "I don't know time-wise how it can happen now."
AP
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