Merrill Lynch Wealth Management assembled a panel of experts for a Webcast on Monday, July 19, to discuss why they believe taxes will rise, what form these increases are likely to take and how higher rates may affect taxpayers.
The panelists for the Merrill Lynch Webcast "Preparing for Higher Taxes" were:
? Sallie Krawcheck, president of global wealth and investment management at Bank of America;
? Harold Ford Jr., executive vice chairman for global banking and wealth management at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and former Congressman from Tennessee;
? Andrew Friedman, tax expert and former partner at Covington & Burling;
? Megan McArdle, business and economics editor of The Atlantic; and
? David Bianco, head of U.S. equity strategy, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research
Many industry, tax, and policy experts believe that rising taxes are all but inevitable. Krawcheck cited several reasons. "The U.S. budget deficit has soared to record levels and is projected to top well over a trillion dollars in 2010 for the second year in a row… And that most likely means that many of the tax cuts enacted earlier in the decade will be allowed to expire at year-end. The White House has signaled that it's not interested in raising corporate tax rates, meaning that much of the burden could fall on the U.S. household, and primarily on Americans in the higher tax brackets."
The panelists agreed that taxes would rise. Bianco said the biggest threat to the U.S. economy, given that it is highly levered, is a surge in interest rates. "It's important that we take actions to convince the bond market we're going to, maybe not solve, but improve the situation. And that's why I think all of us were saying, there's going to be higher taxes, but we also have to find areas to cut back on spending."