- Nonpartisan panel examined revenue-related parts of virus law
- Payments to individuals are ‘phase three’ bill’s biggest cost
Sending $1,200 checks to millions of Americans, providing tax breaks to employers that retain their staff, and securing other tax help for businesses will come with an almost $600 billion price tag.
The nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation estimated a $591.1 billion reduction in revenue over a decade from tax and health provisions in the third coronavirus response law (
The payments of as much as $1,200 per individual and $500 per child account for almost half that cost.
The law includes several changes to the 2017 tax overhaul (
Additionally the measure allows money in medical savings accounts to be used for over-the-counter medicine and menstrual products. That change will cost $8.7 billion over a decade.
The following table summarizes the most costly tax provisions in the $2 trillion package. The law includes several additional tax and health provisions that would affect revenue.
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