The Columbus Dispatch

Bill yields cuts, but not simpler tax code

- By Jim Tankersley

WASHINGTON — The Republican tax bill does not pass the postcard test.

It leaves nearly every large tax break in place. It creates as many new preference­s for special interests as it gets rid of. It will keep corporate accountant­s busy for years to come. And no taxpayer will ever see the postcardsi­ze tax return that President Donald Trump laid a kiss on in November as Republican leaders launched their tax overhaul effort.

This was not the grand simplifica­tion of the code that Republican­s promised when they set out to eliminate tax breaks and cut the number of tax brackets as they lowered rates.

As their bill tore through Congress, their ambitions fell to the powerful forces of lobbying and the status quo. Killed tax breaks returned to life. New ones sprung up beside them. A plan for three individual tax brackets became five, and finally eight.

Trade groups, such as the one for real estate agents, were able to preserve many benefits targeted for eliminatio­n.

The groups whose breaks were actually killed formed an eclectic, if less powerful, bunch: bicycle commuters, gamblers, workers whose companies give them free food.

What emerged Friday, in the final product agreed to by Republican members of a House-Senate conference committee, was a bill that layers new tax complexiti­es on businesses large and small and that delivers a larger share of benefits to corporatio­ns and the rich than to the middle class.

It sets all tax relief for individual­s to expire in eight years, while making deep and permanent cuts to the corporate tax rate.

It limits one key benefit for taxpayers in high-tax states but otherwise does little to back up Trump’s promise last month that “we’re also going to eliminate tax breaks and complex loopholes taken advantage by the wealthy.”

The final legislatio­n,

which appears on track to be approved by Congress this week, offers little redress to workers who have grown to believe that the country’s tax-law thicket gives an advantage to those with power, political connection­s and lawyers on retainer.

Its evolution undermines a central selling point for a bill that is already seen by most Americans as unlikely to benefit them, according to polls.

Budget experts had hoped for a tax overhaul that stoked additional economic growth by eliminatin­g targeted tax breaks, which would allow for lower tax rates, a trade that economists generally believe increases efficiency in the economy.

“The whole purpose of tax reform is to eliminate tax breaks to simplify the tax code and reduce rates,” said Marc

Goldwein, senior vice president for the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget in Washington. “But from what I can see, they only repeal one significan­t tax break, and very few if any tiny ones.”

The House measure did take one significan­t step toward simplifyin­g the process for some taxpayers. It nearly doubled the standard deduction, a decision that stuck through every version of the legislatio­n, including the final one. Because of this change, congressio­nal staff members project, only 6 percent of Americans will itemize their tax returns, down from 30 percent now.

An analysis accompanyi­ng the final bill predicted that “this reduction in complexity and record keeping also may result in a decline in the number of individual­s using a tax-preparatio­n service, or tax-preparatio­n software, or a decline in the cost of such service or software.”

House members also targeted dozens of tax breaks for eliminatio­n, including popular deductions for large out-ofpocket medical expenses and state income taxes paid. Some targets, such as a tax credit for adoptive parents, were spared under intense pressure. Still, the bill, passed two weeks after its introducti­on, killed a far greater number of narrowly tailored breaks than it created.

But that ratio sank in the Senate, where lawmakers added waves of new breaks to the bill, such as an excise tax cut for craft brewers and special relief for certain citrus growers. Shortly before the legislatio­n passed the Senate, Republican­s tried to insert a provision that initially appeared designed to benefit a single conservati­ve college in Michigan, before Democrats and a handful of Republican­s banded together to strike it in a floor amendment.

The final Senate bill included eight tax brackets, up from five in the House plan and seven in the current system, and it created at least as many new special-interest provisions as it eliminated.

In the House-Senate conference committee, the Senate — where Republican­s need to preserve nearly every vote because of their narrow majority — prevailed on most questions of whether targeted breaks would stay or go.

Medical expense deductions stayed, as did tax breaks for teacher supplies, student-loan payments and tuition waivers for graduate students, all of which had been eliminated in the House plan. The conference bill even retained a tax break that helps profession­al sports teams build new stadiums with taxpayer dollars.

The only major provision eliminated was a special tax treatment for manufactur­ers.

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