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‘Fiscal cliff’ would spike taxes on most Americans, report says

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Wealthier households would see an overall increase of $120,000, on average, in their tax bill, the report said.

Lower-income households tend to benefit more from tax credits for children, earned income and college tuition that were expanded under Obama’s 2009 stimulus. Republicans would prefer to let those expire at year’s end.

Households at the lowest end of the income scale would pay about $400 a year more, the report said.

Overall, the report said middle-income Americans would see an average $2,000 tax hike, largely from the expiration of those combined tax breaks and others.

Virtually all workers earning $106,000 or less have been benefiting from the two-year payroll tax holiday, which has been providing a break of up to $2,000 a year on the amount paid in Social Security taxes. Congress and the White House used the tax break as a way to boost the sluggish economy by allowing more take-home pay, but are essentially in agreement that the tax should expire Dec. 31.

The report tackled only the tax components of the fiscal cliff, but analysts have warned that although the combination of spending cuts and higher taxes would help reduce the nation’s deficit, they would also operate as a vacuum, taking money out of the economy, and would likely send the country into another recession in 2013.

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