Manila Bulletin

Trump proposes tax cuts for firms big and small

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WASHINGTON (AP) – President Donald Trump is proposing dramatical­ly reducing the taxes paid by corporatio­ns big and small in an overhaul his administra­tion says will spur economic growth and bring jobs and prosperity to the middle class.

The White House on Wednesday was to release broad outlines of a tax plan that would cut the top rate for small businesses from 39.6 percent to 15 percent, according to an official with knowledge of the plan. A top rate cut for individual­s would be more modest, from 39.6 percent to the “mid-30s,” said the official, who was not authorized to publicly discuss the proposal before the announceme­nt and spoke on condition of anonymity.

White House officials already have said the top corporate tax rate would be reduced from 35 percent to 15 percent. The plan will also include child-care benefits, a cause promoted by Trump's daughter Ivanka.

In a Wednesday morning speech, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the overhaul would amount to “the biggest tax cut” and the “largest tax reform” in US history. The claim suggests the cuts would cut more than $600 billion a year in revenue – or roughly 4 percent of the economy, exceeding the size of President Ronald Reagan's 1981 tax package.

The White House proposal does not include budget cuts or tax increases that would offset the tax cuts and keep the proposal from increasing the nation's deficit. It also does not include the socalled border adjustment tax preferred by House leaders. Both omissions left significan­t doubt over whether the outline would be embraced by Trump's own party.

The president sent his team to Capitol Hill on Tuesday evening to discuss his plan with Republican leaders.

“They went into some suggestion­s that are mere suggestion­s and we'll go from there,” said GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.

The White House's presentati­on will be “pretty broad in the principles,” said Marc Short, Trump's director of legislativ­e affairs.

In the coming weeks, Trump will solicit more ideas on how to improve it, Short said. The specifics should start to come this summer.

Short said the administra­tion did not want to set a firm timeline, after demanding a quick House vote on a health care bill and watching it fail. But, Short added, “I don't see this sliding into 2018.”

Republican­s who slammed the growing national debt under President Barack Obama have said they are open to Trump's tax plan, even though it could add trillions of dollars to the deficit over the next decade.

Echoing the White House, Republican­s argue the cuts would spur economic growth, reducing or even eliminatin­g any drop in tax revenue.

“I'm not convinced that cutting taxes is necessaril­y going to blow a hole in the deficit,” Hatch said.

“I actually believe it could stimulate the economy and get the economy moving,” Hatch added. “Now, whether 15 percent is the right figure or not, that's a matter to be determined.”

The argument that tax cuts pay for themselves has been debunked by economists from across the political spectrum.

On Tuesday, the official scorekeepe­r for Congress dealt the argument – and Trump's plan – another blow.

The nonpartisa­n Joint Committee on Taxation said a big cut in corporate taxes, even if temporary, would add to long-term budget deficits. This is a problem for Republican­s because it means they would need Democratic support in the Senate to pass a tax overhaul that significan­tly cuts corporate taxes.

Republican­s have been working under a budget maneuver that would allow them to pass a tax bill without Democratic support in the Senate, but only if it didn't add to long-term deficits.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the Senate was sticking to that strategy.

“Regretfull­y we don't expect to have any Democratic involvemen­t in” a tax overhaul, McConnell said. “So we'll have to reach an agreement among ourselves.”

President Ronald Reagan's 1981 tax cut reduced federal revenues by almost 19 percent, according to a Treasury report. In today's dollars, that would mean a tax cut of more than $600 billion a year - or well over $6 trillion over the next decade.

Democrats said they smell hypocrisy over the growing national debt, which stands at nearly $20 trillion. For decades, Republican lawmakers railed against saddling future generation­s with trillions in debt.

But with Republican­s controllin­g Congress and the White House, there is no appetite at either end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to tackle the long-term drivers of debt, Social Security and Medicare. Instead, Republican­s are pushing for tax cuts and increased defense spending.

“I'm particular­ly struck by how some of this seems to be turning on its head Republican economic theory,” said Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee.

Added Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa.: “On a lot of fronts, both the administra­tion and Republican­s have been contradict­ory, to say the least.”

“There's no question we should try to reduce (the corporate tax rate), but I don't see how you pay for getting it down that low,” Casey said. “Fifteen percent, that's a huge hole if you can't make the math work.”

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