“As opponents continue to raise alarms about the GOP
tax plan being pushed by President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers—with
the House expected to vote Tuesday afternoon and the Senate later in the day—a
new analysis details 13 ways the proposed tax cuts for corporations and wealthy
individuals will negatively impact American families and the U.S. economy while
lavishing rewards on corporations and the rich.
“The analysis by American for Tax Fairness
(ATF)—a coalition of more than 425 groups that advocate for progressive tax
reform—found that the Republicans' plan would give more than 80 percent of tax
cuts to the nation's richest one percent while also—among other things—raising taxes
on 92 million middle-class families; increasing healthcare premiums; encourage
outsourcing of U.S.-based jobs; and limiting deductions for state and local
taxes.
“ATF's analysis warns that the GOP's proposed legislation:
- Gives 83% of the tax cuts to
the richest 1% by 2027. The richest 1% of taxpayers will get one-fifth (21%) of the tax cuts in
2018, but that grows to 83% by 2027. Their tax cut will average $51,000 in
2018; the bottom 60% of taxpayers will get about a dollar day. [Tax Policy Center
(TPC)]
- Raises taxes on 92 million middle-class families by
2027 to pay for tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations. That is more than one-half
(57%) of all households making less than $200,000 a year. 69 million
households making less than $100,000 a year would also pay more in taxes
after the temporary tax cuts for individuals expire. [TPC]
- Mandates automatic Medicare
cuts of at least $25 billion in 2018 and $400 billion over 10 years. In effect, seniors will pay
for tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy as automatic spending cuts
are triggered because the tax cuts add $1.5 trillion to the national debt.
Automatic cuts altogether will total $136 billion in 2018 and include
reductions in agriculture subsidies, student loans, military retirement
and more. [Congressional Budget Office (CBO)]
- Increases health care
premiums and leaves 13 million families without health coverage, to raise revenue
for tax breaks that mostly benefit the wealthy and corporations.
- The plan repeals a key part
of the Affordable Care Act: the requirement for individuals to have health
coverage if they can afford it. That makes $314 billionavailable for tax cuts.
[Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT)]
- This will lead to 13 million more people being
uninsured and cause a 10% increase in health insurance premiums for people
getting insured on the individual market. [CBO]
- Provides a corporate tax rate cut of $1.4 trillion and
makes those cuts permanent, but makes tax cuts for individuals and
families temporary. [JCT]
- The corporate tax rate is
slashed from 35% to 21%, and the corporate Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
is eliminated.
- The $1.4 trillion corporate-tax-rate
cut is nearly equal to the $1.5 trillion by which the whole tax plan
increases the national debt, and to the $1.5 trillion cut the Republican
budget makes to Medicare ($473 billion) and Medicaid ($1
trillion). [Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP)]
- Tax cuts that benefit
working families will expire after 2025. However, one individual tax cut
made permanent changes the way tax brackets are adjusted for inflation, resulting in
growing tax increases over time. [CBPP]
- Adds $1.5 to $2.2 trillion
to the national debt, jeopardizing critical services. The plan includes at
least $1.5 trillion in tax cuts that are
not paid for, such as by closing loopholes used by the wealthy and
corporations. [JCT] Because the bill contains several budget gimmicks that
obscure the true cost of the tax cuts, the cost could be as much as $2.2 trillion. [CBPP] This will balloon
the national debt and further endanger funding for Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid, public education and more.
- Prioritizes the wealthiest
taxpayers over working families with children. The plan lowers the top
individual tax rate from 39.6% to 37%, giving more tax cuts to the richest 518,000 households. The GOP chose not to fully adjust changes in the Child Tax
Credit so that some 24 million children in working
families could fully benefit. Both of these changes would cost roughly the
same amount, about $80 billion over 10 years. [Institute on Taxation and
Economic Policy (ITEP), CBPP]
- Prioritizes wealthy business
owners and real estate developers like Donald Trump. They get a net $265 billion tax cut from a new 20%
deduction for “pass-through” business income combined with a tightening of
rules on losses. Applied to the new 37% top individual tax rate, this 20%
deduction on business income will drop the top pass-through business tax
rate from 39.6% to 29.6%. More than 80% of this tax cut will go to the
top 5% in 2019. Trump owns
more than 500 pass-throughs. Pass-through owners—which
include sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLC’s and S corporations—pay
taxes due on their business income on their personal returns at individual
rates. [JCT, ITEP]
- Kills American jobs by
encouraging outsourcing and profit shifting. The plan creates a
territorial tax system, which exempts foreign profits from U.S. taxes.
While the plan will tax some of those offshore profits, the effective tax
rate will be far below the U.S. rate. U.S. multinationals will have even
more tax incentives to outsource more jobs and shift more profits offshore.
- Hands a $400 billion tax cut
to offshore tax dodgers. American corporations have $2.6 trillion
in profits stashed offshore on which they owe $750 billion in U.S. taxes. Rather
than make them pay what they owe, like all the rest of us do, the tax plan
will charge them only $339 billion—over a $400
billion discount. Apple will save $44 billion and Microsoft $25 billion,
based on their Securities and Exchange Commission tax filings. [ITEP]
- Limits the federal deduction
for state and local taxes (SALT), hurting the middle class. The bill caps at
$10,000 the amount of state and local property and income or sales taxes
that can be deducted from federal taxable income. This is one of the
reasons that nearly 8 million families will see
tax increases in 2018. The impact of this change will be felt especially
in the 20 states that claim an average SALT
deduction of more than $10,000. Limiting SALT will put pressure on state and local budgets,
likely forcing cuts to education, health care, and infrastructure. [TPC,
CBPP]
- Lets many wealthy heirs
avoid paying the estate tax. The estate tax is substantially
weakened, losing $83 billion and allowing very
rich families to inherit wealth tax-free. Under current law, the tax only
applies to estates worth over $5.5 million per person or $11 million per
couple—about 5,500 estates. Under the bill, only estates worth at least $11 million per
person or $22 million per couple (about 1,800 estates) would pay the tax. [JCT,
TPC, CBPP]
- Enriches President Trump and
his family. In
addition to cutting the top individual income tax rate and creating a tax
break for income from pass-through business entities (of which Trump owns
500), the bill preserves the many existing tax loopholes for real estate investors and
even creates a new one. The final bill exempts real estate owners from a
provision meant to limit abuse of the new pass-through income deduction” [ITEP].
From Common Dreams, December 19, 2017
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