Santa Fe New Mexican

Wealthiest ‘clear winners’ in tax plan

Experts say proposal would shift trillions to the rich

- By Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Patricia Cohen

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s proposal to slash individual and business taxes and erase a surtax that funds the Affordable Care Act would amount to a multitrill­ion-dollar shift from federal coffers to America’s richest families and their heirs, setting up a politicall­y fraught battle over how best to use the government’s already strained resources.

The outline that Trump offered Wednesday — less a tax overhaul plan than a list of costly cuts with no price tags attached, rushed out by a president staring down his 100-day mark in office — calls for tax reductions for individual­s of every income level as well as businesses large and small. But the vast majority of benefits would accrue to the highest earners and largest holders of wealth, according to economists and analysts, accounting for a lopsided portion of the proposal’s costs.

“The only Americans who are very clear winners under the new system are the wealthiest,” said Edward Kleinbard, a law professor at the University of

Southern California and former chief of staff of Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation, which estimates the revenue effects of tax proposals.

Repealing the estate tax, for example, would affect just 5,300 or so fortunes a year. For 2017, couples can shield up to $11 million of their estates from any taxation, leaving only the largest inheritanc­es subject to taxation. Repealing the estate tax alone would cost an estimated $174.2 billion over a decade, the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center said.

Lowering the rate on capital gains, noncorpora­te business taxes and those in the highest bracket, as well as repealing the alternativ­e minimum tax, would also ease the burden on wealthier Americans. So would the repeal of the Affordable Care Act’s 3.8 percent surtax on the investment income of high earners, put in place to subsidize health coverage for low-income Americans.

“These are all affliction­s of the affluent,” Kleinbard said.

There is no way to know how the mathematic­s of the proposal would work, since the White House offered no cost estimates, no detail about which incomes would be taxed at what levels and no informatio­n about tax deductions or other breaks that might be eliminated to make up for the lost revenue.

On Thursday, Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, suggested that tax benefits for retirement savings would be rolled back to mitigate the cost of the tax cuts, the kind of tough decision that makes a rewrite of the tax code so politicall­y difficult. But within minutes, White House officials said Spicer had misspoken.

Officials instead said specifics would come later, as negotiatio­ns unfolded with members of Congress to draft legislatio­n.

The administra­tion’s silence on many crucial details of the proposal was by design, to leave room for what promise to be intense negotiatio­ns with lawmakers in Congress, said Rohit Kumar, the leader of PwC’s Washington National Tax Services and a former senior Republican Senate aide.

Yet without specifics, he added, “you can’t make anything but a wild guess on what the distributi­onal effects of the proposal would be.”

“What the administra­tion put out yesterday is all of the good news,” Kumar said. “They’ve withheld on the bad news.”

But estimates of the effects for some of the cuts that were outlined Wednesday, such as the estate tax and alternativ­e minimum tax repeals, can be made, and they run directly counter to the populist themes that animated Trump’s campaign. He has often stated his concern for ordinary working men and women who he contends were forgotten under previous administra­tions but have risen to the top of the priority list under his leadership.

Many economists who analyzed a similar plan Trump proposed during his presidenti­al campaign found that it would have disproport­ionately helped the richest. William Gale, an economist at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington, estimated that just over 50 percent of the benefits of that proposal would have gone to the top 1 percent of taxpayers.

The new proposal “loses probably something in the neighborho­od of $5 trillion in revenue over 10 years with regressive tax cuts that exacerbate the inequaliti­es that already exist in our economy,” said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities who was a top economist in the Obama administra­tion.

Trump’s economic team argues that there is no disconnect; the tax reductions they are seeking, they argue, will ultimately help all Americans, including the poorest, by spurring growth that will translate into more jobs and better wages.

Still, it seems almost inevitable that the blueprint, should it eventually yield legislatio­n, would violate the vow Steven Mnuchin, his Treasury secretary, made that the administra­tion would provide “no absolute tax cut for the upper class.”

Higher earners also appear likely to reap the greatest benefit from repealing the alternativ­e minimum tax, which is set at a marginal rate of 28 percent and falls most heavily on those who earn between $250,000 and $1 million. In 2013, President Barack Obama and Congress reached agreement on a “fix” that shielded middle-class families from the tax. So any repeal now would benefit wealthier taxpayers.

Only a fifth of taxpayers who earn above $1 million were affected by the provision, a parallel tax system that limits the deductions and other tax breaks available to them, in part because interest and investment income are exempt.

A glimpse of Trump’s 2005 tax returns revealed that the alternativ­e minimum tax cost him roughly $31 million by setting a floor that even a stack of individual loopholes could not reduce. Repealing it would cost $412.8 billion over a decade, the Tax Policy Center has estimated.

At the same time, lowerand middle-income families could be in a worse position. The White House proposes to reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to three: 10, 25 and 35 percent. But no one yet knows where the income cutoff lines are being drawn. People who end up being pushed into a lower bracket would be better off, but those kicked into a higher bracket would not be.

Families with after-tax income between roughly $19,000 and $76,000, for example, are now in the 15 percent marginal tax bracket, which is slated for eliminatio­n.

“That’s where the middle of America is,” Kleinbard said. While some may drop into the new 10 percent bracket, others could be nudged up into the 25 percent range.

Increasing the standard deduction to about $24,000 for couples might also appear to help most families, but that is not necessaril­y the case, Kleinbard pointed out. Larger families, which now benefit from being able to add a deduction for every additional member of their household, could lose out.

“At the bottom end, the typical family will be worse off if personal exemptions go away,” he said.

A glimpse of Trump’s 2005 tax returns revealed that the alternativ­e minimum tax cost him roughly $31 million by setting a floor that even a stack of individual loopholes could not reduce.

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