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U.S. "fiscal cliff" averted as House OKs Senate bill
Last Updated: 2013-01-02 13:02 | Xinhua
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US President Barack Obama delivers a statement at the White House in Washington DC., the United States, Jan. 1, 2013. The U.S. House of Representatives passed a Senate bill Tuesday night, giving the final congressional approval to the bipartisan compromise to avert the "fiscal cliff". (Xinhua/Zhang Jun)

The U.S. House of Representatives passed a Senate bill on Tuesday night, giving the final congressional approval to the bipartisan compromise to avert the "fiscal cliff."

After a long day of deliberation, the bill was adopted on a 257-167 vote and thus is ready for U.S. President Barack Obama's signature.

The measure, overwhelmingly endorsed by the Democrat-led Senate in the early morning, would extend current tax rates for most American households and postpone the automatic spending cuts for two months.

The passage ended weeks of political bickering around the fiscal crisis.

The bipartisan proposal would prevent a tax rate rise on individuals with an annual income below 400,000 U.S. dollars and households making up to 450,000 dollars. Under the deal, jobless insurance benefits for about 2 million long-term unemployed would be extended for a year.

Meanwhile, the start of 1.2 trillion dollars in automatic spending cuts over 10 years, known as the "sequester," would be put off for two months. It had been scheduled to begin with the start of the new year.

At a White House press conference held after the passage of the bill in the lower chamber, Obama said he would sign the law that raises taxes on the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans while preventing a middle-class tax hike that could have sent the economy back into recession and obviously had a severe impact on families all across America.

"This law is just one step in the broader effort to strengthen our economy and broaden opportunity for everybody. The fact is the deficit is still too high, and we're still investing too little in the things that we need for the economy to grow as fast as it should," Obama told reporters.

Obama acknowledged that the "messy nature" of the process over the past several weeks in resolving the "fiscal cliff" has made businesses more uncertain and consumers less confident.

Obama stressed that he was "very open to compromise" in finding ways to curb the costs of major U.S. entitlement programs and cutting unnecessary spending in U.S. government in the future.

US House passes fiscal cliff bill

The US House of Representatives passed a Senate bill Tuesday night, giving the final congressional approval to the bipartisan compromise to avert the "fiscal cliff".

US 'fiscal cliff' bill adds $4 trillion deficit

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) on Tuesday said the Senate-passed bill to avert the "fiscal cliff" would add roughly 4 trillion dollars to federal deficit over a decade, largely because it would extend low tax rates for most Americans.

U.S. Senate passes "fiscal cliff" deal

The U.S. Senate passed a plan to avert the "fiscal cliff" at midnight Monday, which would extend current tax rates for most American households and postpone the automatic spending cuts that threaten a new recession.

 

US Senate's 'fiscal cliff' bill packed with sweeteners

 

The US Senate packed an eclectic mix of handouts and takebacks into its last-minute deal to avoid the "fiscal cliff," including a measure to repeal part of President Barack Obama's signature healthcare overhaul and a string of special interest tax breaks.

 

US Congress misses "fiscal cliff" deadline

The U.S. Senate passed a plan to avert the "fiscal cliff" at midnight Monday, which would extend current tax rates for most American households and postpone the automatic spending cuts that threaten a new recession.

White House, Republicans reach deal on fiscal cliff

 

White House and Senate Republicans have reached a deal to avert the "fiscal cliff," U.S. media reported Monday night.

 

Over the "cliff," the real devil is "fiscal abyss"

 

After coming too dangerously close to the "fiscal cliff," U.S. politicians have reportedly reached a deal to avoid sharp tax increases and deep spending cuts.

Frustrating fiscal talks expose deficiencies of U.S. political system

The American people were once better known for their ability to make tough choices on difficult issues.

So it was really frustrating for many people in this part of the world when they woke up on the first day of 2013 and found out U.S. politicians had once again failed to reach a deal to avoid the so-called "fiscal cliff".

 

Obama says "fiscal cliff" deal "within sight" but "not done"

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Monday that an agreement to avert the "fiscal cliff," particularly the impending tax hikes for middle-class Americans, was "within sight" but "not done" yet.

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