Trump tax plan seen as boon for rich, question mark for others

(Bloomberg) — When Donald Trump first rolled out his tax plan last October, it contained a major boon for the middle-class — a near quadrupling of the standard income-tax deduction, to $25,000 for individuals and $50,000 for couples filing jointly.

But when Trump updated his plan with an eye toward controlling its costs on Monday, he didn’t mention the standard deduction at all — calling into question just how much benefit his plan has for lower and middle-class taxpayers.

trump-donald-tax-iag-2016
Donald Trump, presumptive 2016 Republican presidential nominee, speaks during a campaign event in New York, U.S., on Saturday, July 16, 2016. Trump hastily called off a Friday news conference expected to feature an "Apprentice"-style rollout of his vice-presidential pick, citing "the horrible attack in Nice, France," one day earlier. Then he announced it anyway Friday morning on Twitter, marking an anticlimactic finish to a frenzied process. Photographer: Chris Goodney/Bloomberg

In its original form, the Republican presidential nominee’s plan was set to exempt about 70 million lower-income Americans from paying any taxes at all — and offer cuts to middle-income taxpayers, who are most likely to use the standard deduction. When that provision didn’t make it into Trump’s speech on economic policy Monday, observers were left to wonder just how much his revamped proposals will benefit those lower and middle-income Americans.

One of the “big question marks” in Trump’s speech to the Detroit Economic Club was “what is he doing with the standard deduction,” said Kyle Pomerleau, director of federal projects at the conservative-leaning Tax Foundation in Washington. “That was one of the biggest pieces in his original plan. If he backs away from it, it will significantly reduce the benefits to the middle class.”

To be sure, Trump did pay lip service to the idea that those tax payers will still benefit, but it's more of a gray area than before. “No one will gain more from these proposals than low-and-middle income Americans,” he said Monday of his tax plans. He added that “for many American workers, their tax rate will be zero.” But he provided no detail for the standard deduction, and his original proposal has been removed from his campaign website.

“We haven’t settled on what it’s going to be,” economist Stephen Moore, who is advising the Trump campaign on tax policy, said after the speech. “It’s going to be big enough so that most people won’t have to itemize.”

TRIMMING COSTS

Moore and economist Lawrence Kudlow have been working with the Trump campaign to try to lower the cost of his original tax proposal, which contained across-the-board rate cuts for individuals, a major cut in the corporate tax rate and a new business-income tax rate that would benefit both small businesses and billionaires. It’s estimated cost: $10 trillion over 10 years.

Trump’s new plan would provide more modest cuts in individual tax rates. It sets up three rates — 12%, 25% and 33%, which would replace the current seven rates, which top out at 39.6% (He’d originally proposed lower rates of 10%, 20% and 25%). Combined with policies that would roll back business regulation and stimulate growth in the domestic energy industry, Trump’s plans would create enough economic growth to cut the 10-year revenue cost to $2 trillion or less, Moore said.

One new provision in Trump’s plan — a proposal that parents be allowed “to fully deduct the average cost of child-care spending from their taxes” — may provide much more benefit to taxpayers in the upper-middle class. Details of the plan are sketchy so far, but workers whose incomes are so low that they owe no taxes might not be able to take advantage of the deduction, while those with higher incomes could.

“Trump has moved away from his original plan of benefits to the middle class,” said Martin Sullivan, the chief economist at Tax Analysts, a widely-read trade publication.

By enlisting the aid of Moore and Kudlow — both former advisers to President Ronald Reagan — Trump has increasingly embraced so-called supply-side economics, a standard of the 1980s that holds that high tax rates discourage economic growth. The theory’s validity is hotly debated by economists.

Trump “has drunk the supply-side Kool-Aid,” said Sullivan.

PASS-THROUGH PLAN

While Trump’s revised plan does indeed provide a shallower rate cut for top earners — proposing to tax their income at 33% instead of the original proposal of 25% — the plan contains another provision that may soften the blow: a new business tax rate of just 15%.

That rate would apply to all business income, including that earned from partnerships, limited liability companies and other “pass-throughs.” A pass-through business entity pays no taxes itself, but sends earnings onto its individual members, who pay income taxes depending on their tax bracket — at rates as high as 39.6%. And under Trump’s plan, they’d pay just 15%.

More than two-thirds of all such pass-through income flows to the top 1% of tax filers, according to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities. In a research note published after Trump’s speech Monday, the group said the Trump’s business-tax proposal might prompt wealthy taxpayers to “reclassify a greater share of their income as pass-through income in order to take advantage of this much lower rate.”

Meanwhile, under Trump’s revised proposal, middle-class earners who receive comparatively little pass-through income would face a rate as high as 25%.

Trump also on Monday reiterated his call to end the estate tax, which currently applies a 40% rate to any estate worth more than $5.45 million for an individual (or $10.9 million for a couple). Repealing the tax, which is paid by 2 out of every 1,000 people, would cut federal revenue by $320 billion over 10 years, the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities said.

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