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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release June 9, 2000
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
The House has jeopardized our fiscal discipline by passing a costly,
irresponsible, and regressive plan to eliminate the estate tax. If
this
bill were presented to me in its current form, I would veto it
without
hesitation.
Repealing the estate tax would undermine our record of fiscal
discipline
as well as the progressivity, fairness, and integrity of the tax
system.
The cost of this bill explodes from $100 billion this decade to over
$750 billion in the following decade, just as the baby boom
generation
is retiring and Medicare and Social Security are coming under
strain.
This bill gives the largest estates a windfall while steering only a
tiny fraction of the benefits to small businesses and family farms.
By
the end of the decade, the bill would provide a $50 billion tax
break
that would provide only 54,000 estates -- about 2 percent of all
decedents -- with an average tax cut of $800,000. Furthermore,
studies
by economists have found that repealing the estate tax would reduce
charitable donations by $5 billion to $6 billion per year.
I am supportive of targeted, fiscally responsible legislation, such
as
the Democratic alternative, to make the estate tax fairer, simpler,
and
more efficient. I urge the Congressional leadership to work with me
to
relieve the burden of estate taxes for small businesses and family
farms
in a fiscally responsible manner this year. We can do this while
strengthening Social Security and Medicare, investing in key
priorities,
and paying down the debt by 2013.
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