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Impact of Biden Infrastructure Plan on the Construction Industry | Williams Mullen

To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: On March 31, 2021, President Biden unveiled his American Jobs Plan (the “Plan”), proposing to spend about one percent of U.S. Gross Domestic Product per year over eight years in infrastructure repairs and enhancements, manufacturing research and development, small business growth and workforce training. The Plan aims to spend about $2 trillion nationwide in the next decade. The Plan likely will have a significant impact on the construction industry. Although specifics have not been revealed, including allocations to specific states or areas, the Plan includes roughly $1.3 trillion in spending for construction projects across various industries and communities, including $621 billion for repairs and creation of new surface transportation networks such as highways, bridges, ports and rail; $100 billion for resilience of the infrastructure; $111 billion for clean drinking water projects; $100 billion for broadband infras

Democrats can pass Biden s $2 3T infrastructure plan without Republican support

Budget reconciliation rules mean Democrats don t need 60 votes to pass the bill Democrats already used the procedure to enact $1.9 trillion coronavirus plan Means if all Democrats vote yes, it will pass with VP Harris tie-breaking vote  Moderate Democrats including Joe Manchin have called for reduced tax hikes Republicans, who are not likely to give the bill a single vote, are strongly opposing the huge investment plan  Biden also wants to increase corporate taxes to 28% and implement a global minimum corporate tax rate  

Build Back Better, with a Little Help from Plastics

Image: Surapol Usanakul/Adobe Stock Biden’s infrastructure plan is not perfect by any means, but it’s a bold step in the right direction. The plastics industry has much to contribute. Is $2 trillion too much or not enough to spend on infrastructure? Opinions diverge wildly, but here’s one benchmark: The American Society of Civil Engineers estimated that nearly $13 trillion is needed across 11 infrastructure areas  highways, bridges, rail, transit, drinking water, stormwater, wastewater, electricity, airports, seaports and inland waterways  in a report published in January of this year. No one will dispute that our infrastructure is a shambles, the consequence of many years of neglect. Make no mistake  President Biden’s American Jobs Plan is an epic proposal. (It also defines infrastructure in a remarkably elastic way, but that is a debate for another time.) Unlike previous administrations, which paid lip service but not much else to rebuildi

Virginia s Mark Warner says he has concerns about Biden infrastructure package

Virginia Sen. Mark Warner said he has expressed some concerns   He wants input before there s any package I could support   Comes as Sen. Joe Manchin said the $2.3 trillion package needs to be changed Manchin holds major sway in the 50-50 Senate Parliamentary ruling would allow Democrats to pass it without GOP support But that gives leverage to every Democrat to press for their concerns  Biden wants to hike corporate rates to 28 per cent Warner would not comment on that rate hike   Biden on Monday complained about big corporations who paid no income taxes 

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