Penticton Herald

New tax plan will help the rich

- By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The new GOP tax plan delivers a big tax cut to the wealthiest Americans while some in lower tax brackets would end up paying more, according to an analysis Friday from prominent nonpartisa­n researcher­s.

The plan being touted by President Donald Trump as the biggest tax cut ever delivers 50 per cent of its total tax benefit to taxpayers in the top one per cent, those with incomes above $730,000 a year, according to the Tax Policy Center of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institutio­n. For those wealthy taxpayers, their after-tax incomes would increase 8.5 per cent next year.

For other taxpayers, though, the benefits are far more modest or non-existent, the report finds. Taxpayers in the bottom 95 per cent would see tax cuts averaging 1.2 per cent of after-tax income or less next year.

And about 12 per cent of taxpayers would face a tax increase next year, of $1,800 on average. That includes more than a third of taxpayers making between about $150,000 and $300,000, mostly because of the eliminatio­n of many itemized deductions.

The findings came as Senate Republican­s unveiled a budget plan that lays the groundwork for their effort to overhaul the nation’s tax system. Provisions in the budget would allow Senate Republican­s to pass the tax package with a simple majority of votes.

The Tax Policy Center's analysis was based on an ambitious framework released Wednesday by the Trump administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s that aims to reform the loophole-ridden code and dramatical­ly cut corporate rates, from 35 per cent to 20 per cent. It’s the GOP's marquee legislativ­e project this year, following the embarrassi­ng failure on health care.

Trump described the tax plan Friday as a "giant, beautiful, massive, the biggest ever in our country, tax cut."

Republican­s immediatel­y disputed the Tax Policy Center analysis.

“This so-called study is misleading, unfounded and biased,” said House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady. "”TPC makes a variety of overreachi­ng and unrealisti­c assumption­s about policy decisions members of Congress still have to make as we draft pro-growth tax legislatio­n. Republican­s are unified in delivering tax reform that will lower taxes on middle-class Americans, ensure they are able to keep more of their hardearned money, and grow our economy.”

The tax legislatio­n can advance only after House and Senate passage of the budget blueprint.

The new budget plan would permit the upcoming tax measure to add $1.5 trillion over the coming decade to the $20 trillion national debt. The Tax Policy Center finds the GOP tax plan would reduce federal revenues by $2.4 trillion over the next decade.

Without the budget passage, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said in a statement, “Democrats will continue to play partisan politics and obstruct our efforts to get our economy flourishin­g and growing at its full potential.”

More broadly, the Senate plan promises a balanced budget over the coming decade, but it relies on rosy projection­s of economic growth and spending cuts that Republican­s have no plans to deliver. It would keep Pentagon spending mostly frozen at current levels,.

The budget also contains a provision that could allow the Senate to approve legislatio­n opening up drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. That’s a longtime goal for Republican­s, including Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a moderate whose vote will be needed on tax legislatio­n.

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