Oman Daily Observer

Trump’s tax bill balloons deficit, hurts poor

- DAVID MORGAN

The latest US Senate version of a Republican tax bill, strongly backed by President Donald Trump, would balloon the federal budget deficit and hurt poor Americans more than first estimated, congressio­nal fiscal analysts said. Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimated the Republican bill would expand the $20 trillion national debt by $1.4 trillion in a decade, a potential worry for the dwindling number of Republican fiscal hawks in Congress.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office (CBO), another nonpartisa­n research unit of Congress, said poor Americans would be hurt more than originally thought by the bill, largely because it would gut a key provision of the Obamacare healthcare law. At a White House meeting, Trump urged lawmakers to pass the bill soon.

He was scheduled to deliver the same message to Republican­s on Capitol Hill, with the party entering a crucial phase of its push to overhaul the tax code.

Republican­s were hurrying to bring their bill to a Senate vote, possibly as soon as Thursday.

They see it as their last chance to score a significan­t legislativ­e achievemen­t in 2017.

This would save them from having to face voters next year with little to show for nearly a year in power in Washington.

Since Trump took office in January, he and his fellow Republican­s have passed no major legislatio­n, despite controllin­g both chambers of Congress and the White House. Trump has quarrelled publicly with several key Republican senators.

Financial markets have rallied since Trump’s stunning 2016 election victory, partly on hopes of tax cuts for businesses.

The Senate bill would deliver these, although its impact on individual Americans and families would be more mixed.

Congressio­nal analysts said the number of Americans with health insurance would fall by 13 million by 2027 under the Republican tax bill, which would repeal an Obamacare federal fine meant to encourage people to buy health insurance.

Such a change would shrink the supply of healthy, young people insured and drive up healthcare insurance premiums.

The CBO said this would make people with incomes below $30,000 net losers under the bill.

Most of those earning more would be net winners, especially those with incomes between $100,000 and $500,000, it said.

Democrats, who call the bill a giveaway to the rich and corporatio­ns, are expected to oppose it in the Senate.

The House of Representa­tives approved a tax bill by a 227-205 vote on November 16. No Democrats voted for it. Thirteen Republican­s opposed it.

The Senate plans to vote on its tax overhaul package this week, Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn told reporters.

But Senate Republican leaders did not appear to have enough votes to pass the legislatio­n, with about a half-dozen Republican­s viewed as potential “no” votes.

Republican­s, with a 52-48 Senate majority, can lose no more than two of their own lawmakers to pass the bill.

Republican Senator Ron Johnson said he would vote against the bill at a Budget Committee hearing unless his concerns are resolved, according to his office.

“If we develop a fix prior to committee, I’ll probably support it, but if we don’t, I’ll vote against it,” Johnson told reporters in his home state of Wisconsin, according to his office.

Johnson has said the bill unfairly benefits corporatio­ns more than “passthroug­h” businesses, such as partnershi­ps and sole proprietor­ships, which include both small, mom-and-pop companies and some large, non-corporate enterprise­s.

Republican Senator Bob Corker, a prominent fiscal hawk, has said he would support deficit-financed tax cuts only if they boost the economy enough to generate offsetting new revenues.

But because of the bill’s fast-track schedule, an official JCT estimate of that dynamic will not be promptly available.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Demonstrat­ors take part in a protest against tax cuts for rich people in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York.
— Reuters Demonstrat­ors take part in a protest against tax cuts for rich people in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York.

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