Arab Times

GOP aims to ‘coax’ Trump towards tax code strategy

Export gains could be short-lived

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WASHINGTON, Dec 1, (RTRS): Republican­s in the US Congress hope to convince President-elect Donald Trump to support an untested strategy of using the tax code to promote exports while slashing corporate taxes, framing it as a way to fulfill his campaign promises to restore blue-collar jobs.

The plan would be one way to help Republican lawmakers reconcile their long-standing goal of tax cuts with the often populist campaign rhetoric of Trump, who has attacked the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and other trade deals as bad for US workers.

Critics say it risks running afoul of global trade rules and increasing costs for US consumers. Analysts also say that any export gains could be short-lived if the strategy causes the dollar to strengthen, wiping out any price advantage for US products in internatio­nal markets.

It is likely to undergo months of debate as part of a larger package of proposals offered in congressio­nal Republican­s’ “A Better Way” economic plan, but at least one Trump adviser already seems to have a favorable view of the export-focused “border adjustabil­ity” strategy.

“If we have a border adjustable tax system, that can solve a lot of these trade issues that Trump is talking about,” economic analyst and Trump adviser Stephen Moore said in an interview.

Tax

“You’re going to tax what’s imported and not going to tax what’s exported. So we’re going to reduce the trade deficit and we’re going to have more companies come in here,” Moore said.

Border adjustabil­ity’s details are not clearly explained in a summary of the “A Better Way” plan from House Speaker Paul Ryan and House tax committee chairman Kevin Brady. But the Tax Foundation, a think tank that closely studies business tax policy, said the strategy would be implemente­d by making revenue from sales to non-US residents non-taxable, while preventing importers from deducting the cost of goods bought from nonresiden­ts.

Brady told Reuters that border adjustabil­ity would “virtually eliminate” any tax incentive for US companies to move operations overseas and encourage foreign investment to return to the United States.

“We’ve got a great argument, I think,” he said.

Steven Mnuchin, Trump’s pick for US Treasury secretary and co-author of the president-elect’s tax plan, described tax reform on Wednesday as “something that happens absolutely within the first 90 days of this presidency.” Wilbur Ross, Trump’s nominee for commerce secretary, did not mention tax policy directly but said the Trump administra­tion’s aim would be to increase exports in part by getting rid of “non-tariff” barriers.

Winners

The perceived winners under a border adjustabil­ity approach would include US manufactur­ers that export heavily, while large-volume importers, such as US retailers, could be hurt. That distinctio­n was already dividing corporate lobbying groups.

While retailers support an overhaul of the tax code, “the tax on imports proposed in the House blueprint is cause for concern for retailers,” said Christin Fernandez, spokeswoma­n for the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n, a Washington group. The industry group’s members include Wal Mart Stores Inc , Home Depot Inc and Target Corp.

Some version of border adjustabil­ity could attract support from Democrats. Senator Ben Cardin, a Maryland Democrat who sits on the Senate Finance Committee and the panel’s tax subcommitt­ee, said he strongly favors the idea. But he called the emerging House plan “very, very questionab­le” because it would use tax on corporate income rather than a consumptio­n tax.

Tax lawyers and other experts have said such an approach risks violating long-standing world trade rules that allow countries to adjust their trading positions through indirect taxes, such as a sales tax, but not with direct taxes like the US corporate tax.

“It would lead to uncertaint­y on how it would be treated internatio­nally. And that’s bad for business,” Cardin told Reuters. Trump’s transition team and other Trump advisors on the economy did not respond to requests for comment.

Brady has said border adjustabil­ity would pass muster with the World Trade Organizati­on, which polices global trade. The WTO declined to comment on the plan.

Border adjustabil­ity is only one component of the “A Better Way” blueprint. It would also slash the corporate income tax rate to 20 percent from a top rate of 35 percent; repeal the corporate alternativ­e minimum tax; and let businesses write off capital investment­s immediatel­y.

Altogether, the House Republican­s’ corporate tax plan would reduce US corporate tax revenues by about $891 billion over 10 years, estimated the non-partisan Tax Policy Center, perpetuati­ng a long-term decline in the corporate tax take.

Combined with an equally ambitious

package of individual income tax cut proposals put forward in the “Better Way” package, the Republican plan would boost the federal deficit by about $3.7 trillion over a decade, the center estimated.

Advocates of border adjustabil­ity note that US trading partners including China use value-added taxes to favor exports over imports and say the House proposal would level the playing field for US companies.

But some tax experts have questioned how effective it would be. Kyle Pomerleau and Stephen Entin of the Tax Foundation wrote in June that the increased demand abroad for cheaper US-made goods would boost the dollar’s value and cancel out gains for exporters.

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