The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

A tax proposal that could actually help the middle class

- Catherine Rampell Columnist

President Trump campaigned on helping the little guy. His latest tax proposal, he says, is about helping the middle guy.

“It’s a middleclas­s bill,” Trump promised an audience of truckers last week.

Other administra­tion officials and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., have also claimed that their primary objective in reconfigur­ing the tax code is to help the middle class, not the wealthy.

Unfortunat­ely, they seem to have gotten things backward.

In a preliminar­y analysis, the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center estimated that 80 percent of the proposed tax cuts would go to the top 1 percent of earners over the next decade. Meanwhile a quarter of households in the middle quintile would see their tax bills rise.

This should be no surprise, when you consider what’s in the Republican framework.

This made me wonder: What would a tax plan that actually prioritize­s the middle class look like?

A real middle-class tax plan would likely include a large expansion of the earned income tax credit.

For decades, the EITC has supplement­ed lower-income people’s pay through a tax refund. It’s prowork, because it increases the payoff from holding down a job. It also meaningful­ly improves working families’ living standards.

Given these selling points, the EITC has historical­ly enjoyed support from both Republican­s and Democrats. In recent years, both Ryan and President Barack Obama proposed making it more generous to workers who don’t have custody of a minor child.

Fortunatel­y, there’s an (admittedly expensive) off-the-shelf policy available: a Democratic plan to expand EITC eligibilit­y up the wage ladder, to households making as much as $76,000 depending on family size. The legislatio­n would also roughly double the maximum size of the EITC for working families and almost sextuple it for childless workers.

These expansions are designed to help middle-income workers “reclaim” the pay they would have received had there not been decades of wage stagnation, the House bill’s primary sponsor, Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., told me in a recent interview.

Khanna also observed that expanding the EITC is a much more direct way to raise middle-class families’ earnings than some Rube-Goldberg-like corporate tax-code machinatio­ns.

“Trump is saying he’s going to cut the corporate tax rate in order to raise your wages,” Khanna said. “I’m saying: Let’s just raise your wages.”

We could also help middle-income families by expanding the child tax credit.

The GOP tax plan does include an expansion of this credit, to be sure. But what they’ve announced so far doesn’t do much for the middle class.

What about the corporate tax code?

There are some changes that could arguably boost growth and productivi­ty, some of whose benefits could (ahem) trickle down to workers. Cutting rates and eliminatin­g distortion­ary loopholes could be helpful — which is why Democrats previously said they’d support such a plan.

Only, though, if the plan were revenue neutral.

A revenue-negative plan most likely hurts growth in the long run, as Obama’s former chief economist Jason Furman points out.

More important, someone eventually has to cover the cost of unfunded tax cuts through some future combinatio­n of higher taxes and lower spending. Lower spending almost certainly would disparatel­y hurt lower- and middle-income families.

Which is why the best thing elected officials can do to help the middle class would be to make sure any promised benefits are adequately funded. Which would mean raising rather than cutting tax revenue.

Something tells me that’s not what Republican­s have in mind here.

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