| President Bush on Wednesday signed a multibillion-dollar
economic rescue package on Wednesday that means $300 to $1,200
rebates for many American households.
Bush called the measure ''a booster shot for our economy'' to
stave off a recession.
Several dozen members of Congress, including House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi, stood on the stage behind Bush as he signed the bill.
Rebates are to go out beginning in May to taxpayers and low-income
people, including seniors living off of Social Security and veterans
who depend on disability checks. Businesses would get tax breaks
for investing in new plants and equipment.
Most taxpayers will receive a check of up to $600 for individuals
and $1,200 for couples from the Internal Revenue Service, with
an additional $300 per child. People earning at least $3,000 and
those who owe little or no taxes would get $300 for singles, $600
for couples. Those making more than $75,000 and couples with income
exceeding $150,000 are to get smaller rebates _ $50 less per $1,000
they make over those thresholds.
Economic analysts generally believe the $168 billion package
Bush signed will help prevent the current downturn from ballooning
into a crisis. But if the rebates don't spur a consumer spending
spree strong enough to cure what ails the economy, Congress is
ready to throw more money at the problem. Bush said the measure
was ''large enough to have an impact.''
Democrats and Republicans who put aside deep differences to craft
the plan and rush it to enactment joined the president at the
White House for the signing ceremony in the East Room. The package
is designed in part to inoculate lawmakers from voter blame should
the economy continue to lag as the November elections bear down.
Congressional leaders already are considering more economic rescue
measures that could include transportation spending, unemployment
aid and measures to address the housing crunch that's at the root
of the current economic doldrums.
In the meantime, economists are debating how effective the rebates
will be, with critics arguing that debt-burdened consumers will
use the money to pay bills rather than spending the checks and
spurring growth.
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that only 19 percent of
those surveyed said they planned to spend their rebate checks.
Forty-five percent said they would pay bills, while 32 percent
said they planned to invest the money.
The last time the government sent out rebates, in 2003, recipients
spent a little less than a third in the first six months, and
about two-thirds within the first year, according to findings
by the University of Michigan Survey of Consumers, cited by congressional
tax analysts. After rebates were sent out in 2001, just 22 percent
said they would mostly spend them _ rather than saving the money
or using it to pay off debt _ and only one-third of the rebate
was spent in the short run, according to the same study.
Source: Associated Press
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