The Denver Post

Tax bill’s winners, losers

Ultra-wealthy do well under plan passed by House this week.

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON» The ultrawealt­hy, especially those with dynastic businesses — like President Donald Trump and his family — do very well under a major Republican tax bill moving in the Senate, as they do under legislatio­n passed this week by the House.

Want to toast the anticipate­d tax win with champagne or a beer — or maybe you’re feeling Shakespear­ean and prefer to quaff mead from a pewter mug? That would cheer producers of beer, wine, liquor — and mead, the ancient beverage fermented from honey. Tax rates on their sales would be reduced under the Senate bill.

On the other hand, people living in high-tax states, who deduct their local property, income and sales taxes from what they owe Uncle Sam, could lose out from the complete or partial repeal of the deductions. And an estimated 13 million Americans could lose health insurance coverage over 10 years under the Senate bill.

WINNERS

• Wealthy individual­s and their heirs win big. The hottest class-

warfare debate around the tax overhaul legislatio­n involves the inheritanc­e tax on multimilli­on-dollar estates. Democrats wave the legislatio­n’s targeting of the tax as a red flag in the face of Republican­s, as proof that they’re out to benefit wealthy donors. The House bill initially doubles the limits — to $11 million for individual­s and $22 million for couples — on how much money in the estate can be exempted from the inheritanc­e tax, then repeals it entirely after 2023. The Senate version also doubles the limits but doesn’t repeal the tax.

Then there’s the alternativ­e minimum tax, a levy aimed at ensuring that higher-earning people pay at least some tax. It disappears in both bills.

And the House measure cuts tax rates for many of the millions of “pass-through” businesses big and small — including partnershi­ps and specially organized corporatio­ns — whose profits are taxed at the owners’ personal income rate.

That’s a potential cha-ching for Trump’s far-flung property empire and the holdings of his daughter Ivanka and her husband, Jar- ed Kushner. The Senate bill lets pass-through owners deduct some of the earnings and then pay at their personal income rate on the remainder.

• Corporatio­ns win all around, with a tax rate slashed from 35 percent to 20 percent in both bills — though they’d have to wait a year for it under the Senate measure.

Trump and the administra­tion view it as an untouchabl­e centerpiec­e of the legislatio­n.

• U.S. oil companies with foreign operations would pay reduced taxes under the Senate bill on their income from sales of oil and natural gas abroad.

• Beer, wine and liquor producers would reap tax reductions under the Senate measure.

• Companies that provide management services, like maintenanc­e for aircraft, get an updated win. The Senate bill clarifies that under current law, the management companies would be exempt from paying taxes on payments they receive from owners of private jets as well as from commercial airlines.

That was a request from Ohio Sens. Rob Portman, a Republican, and Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, whose state is home to NetJets, a big aircraft management company.

Portman voted for the overall bill. Brown opposed it.

• An estimated 13 million Americans could lose health insurance coverage under the Senate bill, which would repeal the “Obamacare” requiremen­t that everyone in the U.S. have health insurance. The projection comes from the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office. Eliminatin­g the fines is expected to mean fewer people would obtain federally subsidized health policies.

• People living in high-tax states would be hit by repeal of federal deductions for state and local taxes under the Senate bill, and partial repeal under the House measure. That result of a compromise allows the deduction for up to $10,000 in property taxes.

• Many families making less than $30,000 a year would face tax increases starting in 2021 under the Senate bill, according to Congress’ nonpartisa­n Joint Committee on Taxation. By 2027, families earning less than $75,000 would see their tax bills rise while those making more would enjoy reductions, the analysts find. The individual income-tax reductions in the Senate bill would end in 2026.

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