Texarkana Gazette

There are good parts to tax bill—and some work ahead

- Noah Smith

The Tax Cut and Jobs Act of 2017—commonly known as the Republican tax reform bill—has a number of good things in it.

The corporate tax rate cut was something that needed to happen for a long time, and mainly just follows the example set by other developed nations. Limits on the mortgage-interest deduction and the tax deductibil­ity of interest payments will discourage companies and households from taking on too much debt. The limiting of deductions for state and local income taxes, although probably intended as a cynical move to tax residents of high-tax blue states like California and New York, could also be progressiv­e in its impact.

But overall, the tax bill is a mess. Because it was rushed through Congress without extensive debate, there are probably tons of loopholes and perverse incentives in the law that will be discovered in the years to come by clever tax accountant­s and lawyers. These loopholes and bad incentives will need to be closed—if not by the Republican­s, then the next time the Democrats are in power.

Already, though, the broad contours of many problems are apparent. Because the GOP Congress knew about many likely problems in advance, and yet chose to pass them anyway, it’s likely that the task of fixing them will fall to the Democrats. In other words, Democratic politician­s and policy advisers should already be thinking about tax repair.

The biggest problem with the bill is also one of its centerpiec­es—a 20 percent deduction for pass-through business income. S corporatio­ns, limited-liability corporatio­ns, partnershi­ps and sole proprietor­ships will now be taxed at a much lower rate than ordinary personal income. That opens the door for all kinds of tax avoidance. Instead of having a job, just set up a shell company and become an independen­t contractor; your income will now flow through the shell company, instantly lowering your tax rate without any substantiv­e change in what you do.

This amounts to a substantia­l income tax cut for the rich. Not only will it make the tax system less progressiv­e, but it will create large deficits—high earners pay an outsized share of the income taxes that make up the U.S. government’s main revenue source. Instead of focusing on cutting the top income tax rate, as in previous tax cut plans, Republican­s have simply offered rich people a way around it.

A second problem with the tax bill involves the shift to a territoria­l tax system for corporatio­ns. Under the previous system, companies had an incentive to use various accounting tricks to shift profits to overseas subsidiari­es in low-tax nations and hold them there for long periods of time.

Under the new system, some experts believe a company will be able to move its real operations—factories, offices and research centers—to another country, then book the profits in a tax haven, and end up paying almost no taxes. Not only will that reduce corporate tax revenue and increase deficits further, it will probably result in the offshoring of more U.S. jobs—exactly the kind of thing President Donald Trump promised to halt.

A third big problem with the bill is a big cut to the estate tax. From 2018 until 2026, wealthy individual­s will be able to pass on $11 million—or $22 million for couples—tax-free. That’s exactly the opposite of the direction that the country needs to go. The staggering rise in wealth inequality means the country needs more inheritanc­e taxation, not less. And estate taxes are a good way of transferri­ng money away from heirs toward people who will invest it more productive­ly. Instead, the estate tax cut moves the U.S. even further toward a less mobile, less productive and more ossified society with rigid class divisions.

The final big problem with the tax reform bill is the repeal of the individual health-insurance mandate, a key part of the Obamacare system that has substantia­lly increased the number of Americans with health insurance. The mandate imposed a penalty on those who failed to buy insurance, helping to bring down premium costs for those with coverage. Ending this will allow more healthy people to exit the health insurance market entirely, raising prices for everyone else.

So even before all the other loopholes and bad incentives in the tax reform bill make themselves apparent, Democrats should be thinking about fixing these four big problems. The pass-through tax rate should be raised back to the individual tax rate level. The territoria­l tax system should be modified so that companies can’t catch a break by shifting jobs overseas. The estate tax should be expanded, and the individual health-insurance mandate reinstated.

Tax reform is a reality, but the quest for tax repair has just begun.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States