Orlando Sentinel

Report finds GOP tax plan will benefit top 1%

Some in the lower brackets will pay more, analysis says

- By Erica Werner and Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — The new GOP tax plan delivers a big tax cut to the wealthiest Americans while some in lower tax brackets would end up paying more, according to an analysis Friday from prominent nonpartisa­n researcher­s.

The plan touted by President Donald Trump as the biggest tax cut ever delivers 50 percent of its total tax benefit to taxpayers in the top 1 percent, those with incomes above $730,000 a year, according to the Tax Policy Center of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institutio­n.

For those wealthy taxpayers, their after-tax incomes would increase 8.5 percent next year.

For other taxpayers, the benefits are far more modest or nonexisten­t, the report finds. Taxpayers in the bottom 95 percent would see tax cuts averaging 1.2 percent of after-tax income or less next year.

About 12 percent of taxpayers would face a tax increase next year, of $1,800 on average. That includes more than a third of taxpayers making between $150,000 and $300,000, mostly because of the eliminatio­n of many itemized deductions.

The findings came as Senate Republican­s unveiled a budget plan that lays the groundwork for their effort to overhaul the nation’s tax system. Provisions in the budget would allow Senate Republican­s to pass the tax package with a simple majority of votes, preventing Democrats from being able to block the legislatio­n and rendering Democratic votes unnecessar­y.

The Tax Policy Center’s analysis was based on an ambitious framework released Wednesday by the Trump administra­tion and congressio­nal Republican­s that aims to reform the loophole-ridden code and cut corporate rates, from 35 percent to 20 percent.

It’s the GOP’s marquee legislativ­e project this year, following the embarrassi­ng failure on health care.

Trump described the tax plan Friday as a “giant, beautiful, massive, the biggest ever in our country, tax cut.” Republican­s disputed the Tax Policy Center analysis.

“This so-called study is misleading, unfounded and biased,” said House Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady, R-Texas. “TPC makes a variety of overreachi­ng and unrealisti­c assumption­s about policy decisions members of Congress still have to make as we draft pro-growth tax legislatio­n.”

The tax legislatio­n can advance only after House and Senate passage of the budget blueprint. The Senate Budget Committee intends to vote on its plan next week. A companion measure is headed for a House vote next week as well.

The new budget plan would permit the upcoming tax measure to add $1.5 trillion over the coming decade to the $20 trillion national debt. The Tax Policy Center finds the GOP tax plan would reduce federal revenues by $2.4 trillion over the next decade.

Without the budget passage, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said in a statement, “Democrats will continue to play partisan politics and obstruct our efforts to get our economy flourishin­g and growing at its full potential.”

The Senate plan promises a balanced budget over the coming decade, but it relies on rosy projection­s of economic growth and spending cuts that Republican­s have no plans to deliver. It would keep Pentagon spending mostly frozen at current levels, rather than the almost $90 billion increase demanded by GOP military hawks.

The budget also contains a provision that could allow the Senate to approve legislatio­n opening up drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. That’s a longtime goal for Republican­s, including Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a moderate whose vote will be needed on tax legislatio­n.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY ?? In President Donald Trump’s tax plan, the corporate tax rate would be trimmed from 35 percent to 20 percent.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY In President Donald Trump’s tax plan, the corporate tax rate would be trimmed from 35 percent to 20 percent.

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