KEY POINTS
  • As President Joe Biden tries to curry favor for a corporate tax hike, the administration has other ways it could fund a $2 trillion infrastructure plan.
  • Biden could return to a campaign promise to compel the country's wealthiest households to contribute more in income taxes.
  • He could also try to increase the federal gasoline tax, create a so-called mileage tax, or better monetize the U.S. electrical grid.
  • Biden will meet with lawmakers from both parties Monday to kick off negotiations in earnest.
Wind turbines and power transmission lines at a wind farm near Highway 12 in Rio Vista, California, on Tuesday, March 30, 2021.

As President Joe Biden attempts to curry favor for his proposed corporate tax hike, the administration still has other ways it could try to fund and finance its $2 trillion infrastructure legislation.

Biden could decide, for example, to return to a campaign promise to ask the country's wealthiest households to contribute more in personal income taxes or lobby to increase the federal gasoline tax.