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Dems: Some merit in going over ‘cliff’

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Many say even talk of going over the cliff is sheer folly.

“You’re going to have big financial market repercussions to this,” warned economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office. “Those sorts of confidence measures you don’t control – and they happen abruptly.”

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., showed no interest in challenging the fiscal cliff. “I want you to be disabused of any notion that there is any widespread thought that it would be a good thing, for our country, for us to go over the cliff,” she told reporters Tuesday.

Some Democrats think Republicans are ready to bargain anyway.

“Republicans have a pretty good track record of not blinking,” said Jim Kessler, co-founder of the centrist-Democratic group Third Way. “But they had a bright white light shine in their eyes on Election Day.”

Third Way is floating a possible compromise, designed to raise $1.3 trillion in new revenue over 10 years without changing the Bush-era income tax rates. It would cap itemized tax deductions at $35,000. Charitable deductions, however, would be exempt, a nod to the powerful lobbies of universities and other charity beneficiaries.

The plan also would move upwardly mobile earners into higher tax brackets more quickly. It would reinstate the 2009 estate tax exclusion to $3.5 million, with a tax rate of 45 percent for values above that threshold. And it would raise the tax rate for capital gains and dividends by 5 percentage points, to 23.8 percent.

“Nearly all revenue from this package comes from upper income earners,” Kessler said. His group would prefer to raise tax rates on the wealthiest, he said. But the compromise plan gives Republicans a break on that contentious issue.

Also embroiled in the end-of-year negotiations is the Alternative Minimum Tax, which Congress routinely adjusts to prevent big tax hikes on millions. If Congress fails to act by Dec. 31, an additional 28 million middle-income families would be hit with a large and unexpected tax increase when they file their 2012 returns next spring, the IRS says. Also, the annual AMT “patch” usually includes a rule that affects how tax credits are calculated for about 60 million taxpayers. Those taxpayers – about half of all individual filers – would have to wait until at least the end of March to file their returns while the IRS reworks its systems to account for the existing AMT patch expiring, the agency said.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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