The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

White House: Tax cuts would aid middle class

Analysis: Lower corporate rate would raise incomes.

- By Josh Boak

Critics say move would help investors, not families.

WASHINGTON — By slashing corporate tax rates, the Trump administra­tion said Monday, the average U.S. household will get an estimated $4,000 more a year.

This stunning 5 percent increase was met with skepticism from tax experts and Democratic lawmakers who said the math was flawed. Spread across every U.S. household, the White House analysis claims it would generate “conservati­vely” an income jump totaling $504 billion, or about $200 billion more than the revenues currently generated by the corporate income tax.

With this new report, the White House is making a populist argument for its proposal to cut the 35 percent corporate tax rate to 20 percent. Trump has pitched his tax plan as supporting the middle class even though the details point to major companies and the wealthy as the biggest winners. Polls suggest that voters generally frown upon the idea of cutting taxes for businesses — essentiall­y rewarding these firms for avoiding taxes by exploiting loopholes and keeping profits overseas.

“President Trump complains about fake news — this fake math is as bad as any of the so-called fake news he has complained about,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck

Schumer, a New York Democrat. “This deliberate manipulati­on of numbers and facts could lead to messing up the good economy the president inherited.”

The analysis by Kevin Hassett, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said that the considerab­ly lower rate would spur more investment by companies, which would then boost hiring and worker productivi­ty. The average income gains from the reduced rate would range from $4,000 to as high as $9,000, the administra­tion said. Those figures, however, rely on research arguing that workers — rather than investors — would primarily benefit from the lower corporate rates.

“I would expect to see an immediate jump in wage growth,” Hassett said in a phone call with reporters, saying that the salary gains would also come in part from companies bringing back profits held overseas to avoid the relatively high U.S. tax rates.

Separate studies, including a 2012 Treasury Department analysis, found that the vast majority of any savings would go to investors, making it unlikely to push up wages as much as the administra­tion has argued.

The administra­tion removed the 2012 analysis from the Treasury Department’s website after releasing its tax framework last month with Republican congressio­nal leaders.

Outside economists said the income growth projected by Hassett appears to assume that workers appear to bear more than 100 percent of the burden of U.S. corporate taxes — a mathematic­al impossibil­ity.

Jason Furman, Hassett’s predecesso­r under President Barack Obama, said on Twitter that the numbers in the report suggest that workers bear 250 percent of the costs.

Mark Mazur, director of the non-partisan Tax Policy Center, called the estimated income gains “absurd.”

“You’d have to have a tsunami of corporate capital coming into the United States — we’ve never seen that,” Mazur said.

 ?? ABACA PRESS / TNS ?? President Donald Trump speaks Monday during a Cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington. Trump later said he was fighting for “the biggest tax cuts in the history of our nation.”
ABACA PRESS / TNS President Donald Trump speaks Monday during a Cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington. Trump later said he was fighting for “the biggest tax cuts in the history of our nation.”

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