The National - News

Trump tax cut gives corporate America an extra $300bn

- STEPHEN GANDEL Bloomberg

White House officials, back in December, widely criticised the Joint Committee on Taxation’s estimate of the cost of the soon-to-be passed tax cut. But if the first three months are any guide, the tax cut will end up being considerab­ly more generous, not less, to corporate America than the committee and others forecast. How much? At least $300 billion, and likely a lot more, according to my calculatio­ns.

The evidence comes from first-quarter earnings reports – the first to put in real numbers how much corporate America is benefiting from the tax plan, which, starting this year, cut the US corporate rate to a flat 21 per cent from a previous marginal rate that topped out at 35 per cent. Corporate profits in the first quarter rose 23.5 per cent from a year ago, the biggest jump since late 2010. Some of that growth was due to the continued strength of the economy and perhaps the early stimulus provided by the tax cuts. But a good portion of the increase came from tax savings, which accounted for about 11 per cent of overall profits, but provided as much as 43 per cent of the increase, according to my math. That was also more than previously expected. Analysts had thought the tax cut would lift profits by about a third.

To determine how much the tax plan actually lowered corporate America’s tax bill, and boosted profits, I looked at the corporate tax provision that companies in the S&P 500 reported for the first three months of the year. That’s not actually how much they paid in taxes, which we will never know because companies don’t have to make their tax returns public. Experts consider the accounting provision that companies take for tax payments to be a pretty good indication of whether taxes are going up or down. Those tax provisions also include state and foreign income taxes. But it’s a pretty good bet that much of the drop comes from the newly enacted lower federal rate.

Using the tax provisions, I calculated the companies’ tax rates in the most recent quarter and then compared them to the average of what those same companies paid in similar quarters for the past three years. I then applied the difference between this year’s rate and what those companies had paid in the past to pretax profits to calculate the tax savings.

I had to toss out any company that didn’t have a pre-tax profit in the first quarter as well as companies that reported a tax benefit, rather than an expense, in the quarter.

That included some pretty big companies, like Berkshire Hathaway and General Electric Company, which will certainly benefit handsomely from lower taxes in future quarters.

A number of companies have not been all that enthusiast­ic to point out how much of their recent income growth has been coming from tax savings. Home Depot, for instance, which reported a $390 million increase in quarterly profits earlier this month, attributed those gains to “solid results in all markets and categories,” according to its chief executive Craig Menear. Not mentioned in the release was the fact that $372m of that gain, or nearly 95 per cent, was the result of a significan­tly lower tax bill. Home Depot’s rate in the quarter dropped to 23.5 per cent from an average of nearly 35.5 per cent in the past.

About 90 per cent of the S&P 500 have reported their first-quarter earnings. For the rest, I relied on estimates when available. What I ended up with was 424 companies, or 85 per cent of the S&P 500, and a sense that the tax savings will be huge. In the first three months of the year, those companies saved a collective $29.9bn, or roughly $332m a day.

Based on the current expectatio­n, that savings could swell to $1.64 trillion over the next decade, or nearly $300bn more than the Joint Committee on Taxation estimated in December. And that’s just for the S&P 500. Include all the other companies in America, both private and public, and the total savings would most likely be much larger.

The evidence comes from Q1 earnings reports – the first to put in real numbers how much corporates are benefiting

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