Las Vegas Review-Journal

More tax reform benefits

A $38 billion windfall for the Treasury

- Doug Nusbaum Las Vegas Christophe­r J. Lovett Las Vegas

Democrats promised an apocalypse in the wake of Republican tax reform, but it appears their crystal ball was cracked. Not only have several major U.S. companies announced bonuses and investment­s in the month since the measure passed, but some businesses are now promising to beef up retirement benefits.

On Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that at least a dozen large companies — including Visa, Nationwide Insurance and Autonation — plan to boost contributi­ons to employee 401(k) plans as a result of savings they’ll gain from the new tax law.

“The change in the tax law, which cut the U.S. corporate tax rate to 21 percent from 35 percent, is the latest in a series of factors that are motivating companies to raise their 401(k) contributi­ons,” the Journal reported.

This all comes on the heels of Apple’s recent announceme­nt that, thanks to the new law, it will gladly take a

$38 billion tax hit on the $250 billion it holds overseas. It would be the largest one-time tax payment in the country’s history and will happen only because of tax reform.

The GOP tax bill imposes a 15.5 percent levy on foreign profits whether or not they are returned to the United States. Previously, corporatio­ns not only paid taxes abroad, but faced a 35 percent U.S. tax if the money was brought home. That was an incentive for companies such as Apple to keep such profits parked in foreign accounts.

But there’s now no reason for Apple to shield the cash once it’s paid the lower tax rate under the GOP measure. Thus, the company also announced it intends to invest some $350 billion in the United States over the next five years, creating 20,000 new jobs.

“Other big tech companies, which also have stashed money offshore, are likely to pay big tax bills in coming months, although none will be as big as Apple’s,” Wired reported last week.

Would Democrats, who unanimousl­y opposed the tax bill, prefer that the $2.8 trillion American companies collective­ly have in overseas holdings remain in foreign accounts rather than benefit the U.S. Treasury? Apparently so.

As a Journal editorial pointed out on Friday, Barack Obama “could have made all of this happen, but he refused to negotiate seriously with a GOP Congress. Companies continued to self-deport from the U.S. through corporate inversions and financial engineerin­g that erodes the tax base. Democrats in Congress made the same calculatio­n last year, and now not one can share in reform’s political dividends.”

Democrats may still be poised to ride a wave of dissatisfa­ction with the mercurial Mr. Trump to big gains in November. But their continued embrace of punitive taxes and a hyperactiv­e regulatory state do little to dispel the notion that, when it comes to economic policy, they’re trapped somewhere between incompeten­ce and wishful thinking.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 this is somehow bad.

While the deficit under the first year of Donald Trump in 2018 is expected to be about $1 trillion — or an increase of more than 50 percent. That deficit is in a booming economy, not the train wreck left to us by the last Republican president. Oh, and the increase in debt under Obama was not $9 trillion, but $7.6 trillion, so we are well on our way to breaking that record.

One more thing. Under Mr. Obama, the economy grew every year for his entire two terms, which is a very rare. But Mr. Kolander thinks that this is negative. The last time we had such a long period of growth was under Bill Clinton. And we know what Mr. Bush did to that. military or first responder, and the crowd goes wild. And they aren’t the only team to do this. We went to watch the Knights play in Arizona, and the Coyotes did the same.

One point to make to Mr. Root: Next time you go to the game, watch the players when they announce the military or first responder of the game. All of the players from both teams stand and bang their sticks on the boards. This is the way they show their respect for these true heroes.

It truly is an amazing game with amazing people on the ice and in the stands. Go Knights!

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