Los Angeles Times

Good news for the rich

The GOP tax plan contains giveaways for the wealthy, and puts the lie to Trump’s populism.

- By Scott Lemieux Scott Lemieux is a lecturer in political science at the University of Washington.

After some delays, House Republican­s finally released their tax- cut plan Thursday. The Republican­s had trouble coming up with a proposal for the same reason they had trouble coming up with a replacemen­t for the Affordable Care Act: Outside of the Republican donor class, their goals are deeply unpopular. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reveals that President Trump and House Speaker Paul D. Ryan are, in different ways, utter frauds.

Despite a few sops to middle- class families with children, the bill redistribu­tes wealth upward. The big cut in the corporate tax rate and the eliminatio­n of the alternativ­e minimum tax overwhelmi­ngly benefit the wealthy. The 4.6% cut for marginal income between $ 470,700 and $ 1 million for married couples benefits only the aff luent. The gradual eliminatio­n of the estate tax will exclusivel­y benefit extremely wealthy heirs.

Another important giveaway to the rich is the reduction of the tax on “passthroug­h” income for businesses owned by individual­s or small groups of individual­s like, say, Donald Trump’s. Because Trump has not released his tax returns, we don’t know exactly how much he would gain from this shift, but we know it would be yooge.

Meanwhile, the lowest marginal rate will go up to 12%, although the basic deduction available to individual­s and families who don’t itemize will also increase.

The bill is a declaratio­n of war on states with the temerity not to vote for Trump. It eliminates the deductibil­ity of state income taxes while limiting the property tax deduction to $ 10,000, which effectivel­y punishes residents of blue states ( like California and New York) with relatively progressiv­e tax codes. Republican­s, in other words, want to use the federal tax code to incentiviz­e states to make their tax codes more regressive.

Some parts of the House bill are defensible in the abstract. The mortgage interest deduction is a regressive tax break that contribute­s to the lack of affordable housing in popular urban areas, and reducing it to $ 500,000 from the current $ 1 million isn’t a bad idea. If the money were being used to, say, help fund healthcare, this would be a good trade- off. But using the money to fund tax breaks for the rich? Not so much.

The House proposal, then, is classic modern Republican­ism: distributi­ng wealth upward at a time of increasing inequality. And let’s not ignore the fact that the resulting loss in overall tax revenue to the federal government will inevitably lead, in time, to calls for reductions in spending— i. e., to government programs that help the poor.

As if that weren’t all bad enough, this bill is also a bait- and- switch on the part of the president.

Trump was able to capture the Republican nomination in part because he shrewdly recognized the unpopulari­ty of the party’s economic agenda, even among the party’s base. Running as a protector of the welfare state and scourge of Wall Street, he appealed to cultural conservati­ves who cherish Social Security and don’t support upper- class tax cuts. The most relevant parts of the Republican establishm­ent have neverthele­ss gone all- in on Trump for a simple reason: He apparently didn’t mean a word he said.

And this was obvious during the campaign — at least if you paid attention to Trump’s proposals rather than his rhetoric. During the first presidenti­al debate of 2016, Hillary Clinton described her opponent’s tax plan as “Trumped- up trickle down.” Perhaps realizing that the intended catchphras­e wouldn’t be included in any future compilatio­n of great political wit, Clinton delivered the line awkwardly, and it went over poorly. But she wasn’t wrong. Trump’s campaign tax plan was very regressive, and represente­d the same basic priorities as the new House plan. Trump told voters he was a more populist Republican, but his governing agenda lines up with that of George W. Bush.

Speaking of Bush, another important element of the Republican plan is that — like the Bush tax cuts — it will massively increase the deficit. The House bill would cost roughly $ 1.5 trillion in its first decade alone.

But wait, you might ask, isn’t Ryan a green eye- shaded deficit hawk? Er, no. His only true priority is to reduce taxes on the rich as much as he can. And in this respect, Ryan is representa­tive of his party as a whole. Virtually no congressio­nal Republican­s care about deficits, although they might pretend to care about deficits when Democrats are in charge.

Passing this bill won’t be easy. The attack on blue states might be too clever by half, as Ryan will need the votes of some Republican­s in these states who are already facing tough reelection fights. But at least it’s clarifying. The bill shows that the goal of the new Republican boss is the same as the last one: Get as many tax breaks to the rich as possible.

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty I mages ?? HOUSE SPEAKER Paul Ryan and the president discuss their tax plan.
Drew Angerer Getty I mages HOUSE SPEAKER Paul Ryan and the president discuss their tax plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States