President Joe Biden signed a major anti-shutdown bill — the American Relief Act, 2025 package — into law Saturday, at a time when many Washington financial services policymakers have already left for the holidays.
The text of the new law does include provisions that will authorize the federal government to continue normal operations through March 14, 2025. It does not include any life or annuity provisions. But the package, and the fight to pass it, could have a big, indirect effect on life and annuity policymaking starting Jan. 3, when the 119th Congress starts.
The package authorizes about $1.9 trillion in federal government outlays for 2025, according to a Congressional Budget Office analysis.
Here are five ways the fight over the 2025 spending bill will echo.
1. It set the stage for a new government shutdown fight.
Congress will have to go through a new round of negotiations and legislation by March 14 or once again face the possibility of a new government shutdown.
This could create opportunities for financial services industry groups and other players to fight to extend measures that affect financial services clients, such as the provision in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 that doubled the estate tax exemption.
Keeping the estate tax exemption at current levels, rather than letting it fall by about 50%, back to an inflation-adjusted version of the amount in effect before 2017, could help the clients of estate planners but hurt sales of the big cash-value life insurance policies wealthy families have traditionally used to cope with estate taxes.
It could also create an opportunity for players to talk about "Secure 3.0," a package of ideas for helping Americans get more out of 401(k) plans and individual retirement accounts.
One measure that could be part of Secure 3.0 could be a new bill, backed by the American Council of Life Insurers, that would help people roll assets directly from 401(k) plans into annuities.
2. It left the current federal debt ceiling in place.
Federal law sets strict limits on how much the federal government can borrow. Congress has always suspended the limit temporarily to allow the U.S. Treasury and the federal government to operate normally.