The Herald (Zimbabwe)

A massive tax windfall for US financial elite

- Andre Damon Correspond­ent

ON THURSDAY last week, the US House of Representa­tives passed a sweeping Bill that will slash taxes on the wealthy and hike taxes on millions of working class households, in a move that will further fuel social inequality in the world’s most unequal developed country.

Since the 1960s, the slashing of top income and corporate tax rates has been a major driving force in the phenomenal growth of social inequality in the United States. Now, under the fascistic billionair­e real estate mogul Donald Trump, this process is being kicked into overdrive.

The centerpiec­e of the Bill is the reduction of corporate tax rates by almost half, from 35 to 20 percent, at an estimated public cost of $1,5 trillion, making US corporate taxes the lowest since 1939. This will dramatical­ly accelerate the fall in effective corporate taxes that has taken place since the 1950s, when the effective tax rate was 50 percent, to today, when it is less than 20 percent.

Next, the financial elite is salivating over the abolition of the estate tax, which the Bill mandates by 2025, providing a massive windfall to the top 0,2 percent of households.

According to a report published last month by UBS, more than half of all billionair­e wealth in the US is controlled by individual­s older than 70, and the US financial elite has been waiting for the abolition of the estate tax to transfer its wealth to the next generation. The abolition of the estate tax would be a major step towards making the United States a hereditary oligarchy, in which wealth is passed down dynastical­ly without any diminution.

According to the non-partisan Joint Committee on Taxation, under the Senate version of the Bill, by 2027 every family earning below $75 000 per year will see a tax hike, and every family making above $100 000 per year will see a tax cut.

The Bill includes provisions that are little more than cruel and insulting. Alongside a tax break for the ownership and maintenanc­e of private jets, it mandates the eliminatio­n of tax deductions for graduate student stipends and tuition reimbursem­ent. The Harvard Crimson wrote that the result would be a 400 per- cent tax increase on graduate students, who are often massively underpaid.

Finally, by putting a $1,5 trillion hole in the budget, the tax plan will accelerate demands for slashing Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, together with other forms of social spending, to plug the gap.

While Democratic politician­s mouthed criticisms of the Republican-sponsored Bill, its most important measure, the corporate tax cut, has been a major element in the Democratic playbook. The Obama administra­tion’s 2016 budget, for example, called for lowering the corporate tax rate to between 28 and 25 percent.

The New York Times, a leading mouthpiece for the Democratic Party, wrote in an editorial this week, “The Right Way to Cut Corporate Taxes,” that “Republican­s are right about the corporate tax system being broken”. The newspaper added: “If Republican­s worked with Democrats . . . they could reach a compromise to lower the top corporate tax rate to between 25 percent and 28 percent.”

On Thursday, the Times and leading Democratic politician­s were far more concerned with whipping up a series of sex scandals, centred around Republican Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore and Democratic Senator Al Franken.

As expected, all three US stock indexes soared on Thursday following passage of the Bill by the House of Representa­tives. Since the election of Donald Trump, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has shot up by 17 percent, and it has more than tripled in value since the 2008 financial crash.

In an interview last month, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin made clear that a major driving force in the run-up in prices has been the expectatio­n that the Trump administra­tion is going to slash taxes on corporatio­ns and the superrich.

“There is no question that the rally in the stock market has baked into it reasonably high expectatio­ns of us getting tax cuts and tax reform done,” said Mnuchin. “To the extent that we get the tax deal done, the stock market will go up higher.” He also made clear that Wall Street would not accept any slowdown in the upward redistribu­tion of wealth. “There’s no question in my mind that if we don’t get it done, you’re going to see a reversal of a significan­t amount of the gains,” he said

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