Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tax overhaul a sloppy mess

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The new tax package should have been titled “The Just Pass Something Tax Act.” It was enacted based on Republican­s’ need to show that they can pass some significan­t legislatio­n and to reward wealthy donors who had threatened to pull their support if Republican­s didn’t pass a tax bill. So they needed to pass something.

President Donald Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s marketed middle-class tax relief that would not add to the deficit or debt and would make the tax system simpler. Instead, what they passed provides massive tax relief to corporatio­ns and also to many wealthy individual­s. Many middle-class families will get tax cuts, often modest cuts, but others will experience tax increases. And while the corporate tax rate cuts are permanent, the middle-class tax relief is temporary, with taxes scheduled to increase.

Credible independen­t estimates, even taking into account any likely economic growth, suggest it would add at least $1 trillion of deficits over 10 years. This will force spending cuts that will hurt programs aimed at the same middle-class families who were supposedto­benefit. Andifbigge­r deficits and debt pose the same threats that Republican­s told us they do during the Obama years, then we should expect higher interest rates and other serious economic repercussi­ons.

On top of all this, Republican­s have managed to take an inconceiva­bly complex tax system and make it even more complicate­d. They rushed through a sloppy bill creating massive new loopholes for the wealthy. But to their credit, they did pass something. David J. Roberts, associate professor of accountanc­y, Depaul University, Chicago

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