Yuma Sun

Tax split between House, Senate poses big challenge

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WASHINGTON — The House and Senate tax overhaul plans are broadly similar, but crucial difference­s are creating headaches for Republican leaders determined to keep myriad interest groups and factions of the GOP satisfied. And then there’s the ambitious timetable they’ve set of finishing in time to get legislatio­n to President Donald Trump by Christmas.

The most politicall­y challengin­g decisions involve dealing with popular and widely used tax deductions, structurin­g tax cuts for business and balancing personal income tax rates between middle-class families and the rich.

All of these decisions come against a generous — but firm — 10-year, $1.5 trillion cap on the measure’s cost to the federal deficit. Both House and Senate have adopted accounting gimmicks to squeeze tax cuts that appear larger down to fit that restraint.

Trump’s enormously expensive demand for a cut in the corporate tax rate to 20 percent — from the current 35 percent — is a big complicati­on, as is unrest among House Republican­s hailing from affluent suburban districts who are upset over the proposed loss of the deduction for state income taxes.

Here’s a rundown on the major difference­s between the House and Senate bills:

INDIVIDUAL TAX RATES

The Senate measure keeps the current number of personal income tax brackets, seven, though it changes the rates to 10, 12, 22.5, 25, 32.5, 35 and 38.5 percent. That last top bracket for the wealthiest earners carries a higher rate of 39.6 percent under current law.

The House bill goes further toward simplifyin­g the tax system. It shrinks the number of brackets from seven to four, with rates of 12, 25, 35 and 39.6 percent.

Lots of numbers here for congressio­nal negotiator­s to play with, to move up or down.

The inheritanc­e tax on multimilli­on dollar estates, called the estate tax, is an especially hot-button issue. Democrats point to the proposed GOP changes as proof that the Republican­s are out to help wealthy people like Trump and his family.

DEDUCTIONS

The Senate bill would eliminate a taxpayer’s ability to deduct state income taxes and local property taxes. But the final bill may have to closely track a House compromise that provides a property tax deduction of up to $10,000 or else risk a revolt from GOP lawmakers from New York, New Jersey, and California.

The Senate bill preserves popular individual tax breaks for large medical expenses, mortgage interest, electric vehicles and college costs that were targeted by the House. The House limits deductibil­ity of mortgage interest to the first $500,000 of a loan, riling the real estate and housing industries, and eliminates a deduction for medical expenses that’s often taken by families facing crippling nursing home costs.

BUSINESS

Both the House and Senate versions slash the tax rate for corporatio­ns to 20 percent from the current 35 percent. But there’s a big twist: The Senate bill delays the rate cut for a year.

The delay was put in to reduce the bill’s cost by $100 billion or so — but it’s opposed by the White House and House Republican­s. Wall Street hates it too. U.S. stock markets sold off Thursday in response to news of the proposed deferral, with industrial and technology stocks leading the decline, before recouping some of the losses by the close of trading.

Might the implementa­tion delay be traded for a smaller corporate tax cut, something above 20 percent?

Trump actually had been demanding 15 percent and reportedly was initially furious at the 20 percent figure. The issue is setting the corporate rate at a level that experts and tax writers believe would bring the U.S. closer to its overseas competitor­s.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS NOV. 9 photo, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., meets with reporters as he encourages support for Republican tax reform legislatio­n, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS NOV. 9 photo, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, R-Wis., meets with reporters as he encourages support for Republican tax reform legislatio­n, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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