Sept 7 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will announce a series of proposals on Wednesday in Cleveland that he hopes will jump-start the flagging economic recovery and drive the jobless rate down.
The U.S. Congress has balked at even modest new spending initiatives in recent months and officials say the proposals are likely to be narrowly targeted. The following is a summary of some tax and spending policies that have been floated by the administration.
SPEEDING EXPENSE WRITE-OFFS
Obama will propose to let businesses write off all their new investments in plant and equipment through 2011.
The plan would be available to about 1.5 million businesses and cut tax revenues by some $200 billion over two years, the administration says.
It would be retroactive to Sept. 8, the day the president announces it. The hope is that businesses would make investments without waiting for congressional approval of the proposal. A version of the proposal is in a small-business bill pending before Congress.
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT TAX CREDIT
Obama will ask Congress to increase and permanently extend the research and development credit at a cost of $100 billion over 10 years. He proposed a permanent credit when he released his 2011 budget last winter.
The House of Representatives has passed a $31 billion package that renews for one year corporate tax incentives, including a research and development tax credit and tax credits for biofuel use, that have expired.
The so-called tax extenders bill also includes tax breaks for capital improvements to retail business and for finance companies earning money abroad.
The Obama-backed measure, which is paid for by trimming international tax perks enjoyed by some of the same companies, has stalled in the Senate.
TRANSPORTATION SPENDING
Obama proposed a plan on Monday to revamp the United States' aging roads, railways and runways with a $50 billion investment that would be an up-front part of the traditional multi-year transportation bill. The plan includes rebuilding, constructing and maintaining roads and rail lines; rehabilitating or reconstructing runways; and modernizing the air traffic control system.
INFRASTRUCTURE BANK
Obama has proposed a grant and lending institution that would be an independent entity within the Transportation Department and would first focus on highway, bridge and waterway projects. The administration's five-year projection is to capitalize the bank at $25 billion and Obama has sought up to $7 billion in initial funding from Congress.
The bank is part of an infrastructure plan proposed by Obama on Monday.
OTHER IDEAS:
PAYROLL TAX HOLIDAY
A version of this break already exists in the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act signed into law in March that gives tax credits to business to hire workers who have been unemployed for eight weeks or longer.
The Obama administration says businesses that qualified for the credits have hired about 5.6 million workers, but the administration has been unable to link hiring directly to the incentive.
A new version could give a break on payroll taxes -- payments to Social Security accounts -- shared by workers and employers, without the need to hire new workers and extend the time period to use the credits.
Lawmakers would have to work out the accounting so the Social Security trust fund doesn't take a financial hit.
BUILD AMERICA BONDS
Taxable so-called Build America Bonds (BABs), created in the stimulus program last year, were designed to finance infrastructure projects. Moves to extend the program beyond December have largely stalled in Congress.
The bonds pay issuers a federal rebate of about 35 percent of interest costs, and led to $122 billion in bond sales by state and local governments since their debut in April of last year.
Obama has proposed making the program permanent and setting the subsidy level at 28 percent, a level the Treasury Department considers revenue neutral. A recent government report said more than two-thirds of the $34 billion in payments to BABs is offset by higher revenues.
SMALL BUSINESS HELP
Obama continues to call for passage of a $20-30 billion bill to invest in banks with assets of less than $10 billion to spur investment in small business. Republicans have blocked the plan, calling it a waste of taxpayer funds.
INDIVIDUAL TAXES
Obama has stood firm on his pledge to extend the so-called Bush tax cuts for what Obama calls the middle class -- individuals making less than $200,000 and couples earning $250,000 and under.
These tax cuts for all individuals expire at year-end unless Congress takes action to extend them.
Obama and fellow Democrats say the wealthy are unlikely to spend the extra funds while Republicans say such individuals fuel consumption spending, investment and hiring.
Some Democrats, however, are pushing for an extension of all of the Bush tax cuts at least for another year while the economy is still on the mend.
(Reporting by Kim Dixon in Washington; Editing by Philip Barbara)