• What's in the U.S. Senate's $1.2 trillion infrastructure plan?

    28 Jun 2021 | Economic News
  

What's in the U.S. Senate's $1.2 trillion infrastructure plan?

 

 U.S. President Joe Biden on Thursday embraced a bipartisan Senate deal to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on infrastructure projects, building roads, bridges and highways and helping stimulate the economy.

 

Here are some of the details of the bipartisan framework released by the White House, valued at $1.2 trillion over eight years, $579 billion of which is new spending:

 

NEW SPENDING


Roads, bridges and other major projects: $109 billion

 

Power infrastructure, including grid authority: $73 billion

 

Passenger and freight rail: $66 billion

 

Broadband infrastructure: $65 billion

 

Water infrastructure, such as eliminating lead pipes: $55 billion

 

Public transportation: $49 billion

 

Resilience (preparing infrastructure for the impacts of climate change such as floods and other extreme weather events, and cyber attacks): $47 billion

 

Airports: $25 billion

 

Environmental remediation: $21 billion

 

Creation of an Infrastructure Financing Authority focused on clean transportation and clean energy: $20 billion

 

Ports, waterways: $16 billion

 

Safety, including grants to add bike lanes and other steps to protect vulnerable road users: $11 billion

 

Electric vehicle infrastructure, including chargers: $7.5 billion

 

Electric buses, transit: $7.5 billion

 

Western water shortage: $5 billion

 

FINANCING

 

The plan includes a number of proposals to finance the spending. Republicans sketched out those plans:

 

Improve tax enforcement: Net increase of $100 billion after $40 billion invested in enforcement

 

Public-private partnerships and "direct-pay" municipal bonds: $100 billion

 

Redirecting unused COVID-19 relief funds: $80 billion

 

Proceeds from 5G wireless networks spectrum auction: $65 billion

 

Estimated macroeconomic impact of infrastructure investment: $58 billion

 

Redirecting unused unemployment insurance money returned from U.S. states: $25 billion

 

Reinstating Superfund fees for chemicals. Superfund, the program for cleaning up the nation’s worst hazardous waste sites, was originally financed primarily through taxes on petroleum products, chemicals and corporate income: $13 billion

 

Extending expiring customs user fees: $6.1 billion

 

Sale of oil from the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve: $6 billion

 

Reference: Reuters


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