BusinessMirror

Released Trump tax returns show how write-offs shrank what he owed to IRS

- By Laura Davison & Ben Steverman With assistance from Steven T. Dennis and Chris Cioffi/bloomberg.

DONALD Trump’s tax returns show how the former president used a range of write-offs in the US tax code to pay little or no federal income tax, according to six years of records released Friday by a House panel.

The returns, which include his personal and business filings from 2015 to 2020, are the first complete look into Trump’s tax records for the years he was running for office and in the White House. The release comes just days before Democrats relinquish their House majority, which will end much of their ability to investigat­e him.

The documents, which have been the subject of litigation for more than three years, shed light on the sources of the former president’s earnings and the taxes he paid—or didn’t.

In 2020, Trump paid nothing in federal personal income tax. He also reported large losses at his businesses in multiple years thanks to favorable deductions that allowed him to minimize his tax bills. Congress’s nonpartisa­n tax experts have said some of those deductions warrant more scrutiny.

The release on the Friday before New Year’s weekend failed to land any immediate knockout blow Democrats were seeking as Trump seeks another term in the White House.

“We don’t have any smoking gun,”said Sam Brunson, a law professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

Yet even some of the most sophistica­ted tax specialist­s won’t immediatel­y be able to tell if Trump followed the law, experts said, because tax returns don’t automatica­lly include some of the underlying documentat­ion that the Internal Revenue Service can request in an audit. Auditors can get a much deeper understand­ing because they get to see the calculatio­ns that back up a number on a return, said Jo Anna Fellon, a tax partner at accounting firm Marcum.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” Fellon said.“i’m not sure we’ll ever get the full picture.”

Court fight

TRUMP, who fought in court to block the release, said in a statement Friday that the documents show how “proudly successful” he has been as a businessma­n and touted his wide-ranging use of the tax code, including“depreciati­on and various other tax deductions as an incentive for creating thousands of jobs and magnificen­t structures and enterprise­s.”

The returns don’t show employment levels so it’s unclear if Trump used the tax savings to hire more workers. Tax returns are also intended to report income—not total wealth—so the documents don’t reveal Trump’s net worth. Even business returns only report the purchase price for an asset such as a building, not the valuation.

“Businesses are supposed to be in the business of making money. If they’re constantly losing money, it begs the question of whether they’re real businesses,” said Kevin J. Brady, a vice president and certified financial planner at Wealthspir­e Advisors based in Newyork.“it could all be legitimate, but it needs to be looked at.”

The Democratic-controlled House Ways and Means Committee released the returns Friday as part of their investigat­ion into the IRS’S presidenti­al audit program, which found that the agency had failed to examine Trump’s tax returns while in office, as has been done with previous presidents. A report last week summarized Trump’s tax filings and flagged dozens of potential audit triggers that the IRS didn’t pursue.

Trump’s use of business losses to minimize his tax bill is legal as long as he didn’t underrepor­t earnings or inflate the size of the deductions, which can only be determined from a comprehens­ive audit.

Trump paid no taxes in 2020, reporting losses at dozens of properties and holding companies. The coronaviru­s pandemic almost certainly played a role. An Irish golf resort he owned reported a 69 percent plunge in revenue in 2020.

Some properties still made money. Losses of $65.9 million at a variety of entities were offset by $54.5 million in gains at others.

More details

THE returns also give more insight into how Trump was affected by his 2017 tax overhaul, which included breaks and expanded write-offs for some top earners.

His businesses benefited from more generous write-offs for the interest on loans, as well as large deductions for equipment. Trump personally benefited from lower rates and a near eliminatio­n of the alternativ­e minimum tax, a feature that prohibited many wealthy taxpayers from taking too many credits and deductions. With the change, Trump could claim more write-offs.

Yet some features of Trump’s signature law also hurt him. For example, in 2019, his return says, he paid $8.4 million in state and local taxes, but could only claim $10,000 under his tax law. The following year was similar: $8.5 million paid but subject to the $10,000 cap.

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