Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Warren stretches gains of ‘rich folks’

- Jon Greenberg

In her first extended interview after saying she’d run for president, Democratic Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren took on the Republican­s’ 2017 tax bill.

Warren told MSNBC host Rachel Maddow that the package was a $1.5 trillion gift to “billionair­es and corporatio­ns.” Warren said that legislativ­e push held Republican­s together, regardless of what else they might think about President Donald Trump.

“He’s a little louder and (they) don’t like the tweet thing and the whole foreign policy seems to be a disaster,” Warren said Jan. 2. “But hey, the rich folks got $1.5 trillion.”

The Republican Tax Cut and Jobs Act is certain to be a recurring theme throughout the presidenti­al campaign, so we wanted to look closer at whether it gave “rich folks” $1.5 trillion.

Key takeaways

• The $1.5 trillion is one main government estimate of the net rise in deficits due to the tax act over 10 years. The Congressio­nal Budget Office now predicts deficits will go up almost $1.9 trillion.

• Based on estimates from Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation, about half of the tax cuts would flow to the top 10 percent of taxpayers, or those making $200,000 or more.

• That means the amount of money going to “rich folks” would range from $750 billion to nearly $1 trillion, depending on whether you use the $1.5 trillion or the $1.9 trillion estimate.

The basics

The 2017 Tax Cut and Jobs Act made temporary cuts in individual tax rates, and permanent cuts in corporate tax rates. In round figures, for ordinary wage income, the tax rate dropped about two percentage points, from about 29 percent down to 27 percent. On the corporate side, the maximum rate fell from 35 percent to 21 percent.

Congress also changed the rules for estate taxes, temporaril­y raising the tax-exempt limit from $5.5 million to $11 million. Both the individual and estate tax changes end in 2025.

Most of the initial estimates of what lies ahead stop at 2027, because that’s the budget time frame set by law.

The forecast

In order to assess Warren’s claim, we need two things: the total cost of the tax cuts and a table showing how those dollars are expected to flow to different income groups. The nonpartisa­n congressio­nal Joint Committee on Taxation delivers both.

Based on the joint committee’s estimate of a $1.5 trillion cut, here’s how the money would be spread around.

There’s no hard and fast rule to say who is rich, but households making $200,000 a year or more roughly account for the top 10 percent. In this chart of tax law benefits, they get 52 percent of the cuts. We ran this by Howard Gleckman, senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center, a project of the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institutio­n.

“Using the joint committee numbers, it is reasonable to make the split at $200,000, and the numbers show they get about half the tax cut,” Gleckman said.

The Tax Policy Center ran its own model of how the tax law would play out . The results were about the same as the joint committee’s.

“High income people get much of the benefit, but far from all of it,” Gleckman said.

Economist Harvey Rosen at Princeton University called the 50/50 split “a reasonable guess.”

Alan Auerbach, a University of California-Berkeley economist, agreed, saying “ultimately, rough estimates are about all we can do.”

And he cautioned against looking at the corporate tax cuts as a thing unto themselves, as Warren seemed to do when she talked about the cuts as a gift to “billionair­es and corporatio­ns.” At the end of the day, he said, that money goes to individual­s.

“No economist would say a corporatio­n is a beneficiar­y of a tax cut, in terms of its ultimate impact, since corporatio­ns aren’t people. That term, presumably, is a short-hand for those associated with corporatio­ns, but it leaves unclear exactly whom, whether that’s corporate executives, corporate shareholde­rs, but also perhaps corporate employees.”

(The individual tax cuts reduced revenues by $1.1126 trillion, and corporate tax cuts reduced them by $653 billion, or about half as much.)

Both the joint committee and the Tax Policy Center fold in the corporate cuts when they estimate the effect on people.

Limited data

The committee estimated the total costs of the cuts in two ways – one before looking at the effect of the cuts on the economy, and one after factoring in those effects. Without the economic effects, the tax law will result in an estimated $1.456 trillion in lower revenues by 2027. After factoring in the economic impact, the figure drops to $1.071 trillion.

But the committee only estimated how tax payments would go up or down for each income group using the bigger number, about $1.5 trillion, and only for the odd-numbered years — 2019, 2021, 2023, 2025 and 2027.

We took the trends across those years and applied them to the total estimated tax reduction to estimate the share of the tax cuts going to each group.

Alternativ­e estimates

Warren campaign spokeswoma­n Kristen Orthman raised some issues with our findings.

“The Congressio­nal Budget Office has already said the total cost will be $1.9 trillion, not $1.5 trillion,” Orthman said. “And the Joint Committee on Taxation distributi­onal analysis does not account for major giveaways to the rich, like the tax bill’s estate tax cuts. Even if only half the benefits go to people making more than $200,000, that’s still well over a trillion dollars.”

The Congressio­nal Budget Office did raise its estimate. Auerbach and Gleckman were of mixed minds on how to treat that. Auerbach said the distributi­on pattern would probably be about the same and the wealthier households would end up with about $950 billion. Gleckman was less comfortabl­e. “If you are going to hang your distributi­onal analysis on the Joint Committee on Taxation’s estimates, you also should use its revenue estimates,” he told us. “Otherwise you’ll be trying to mix-and-match data, which will only get you in trouble.”

Orthman also noted that the joint committee did not factor in the change in the estate tax. The committee said that provision would cost $83 billion over 10 years. Given that this applies only to estates worth between $5.5 million and $11 million, it’s likely that the beneficiar­ies would be well-to-do themselves. At least some of that $83 billion should be added to the $950 billion based on the CBO figure, Warren’s office said.

That’s reasonable, but it doesn’t change the picture much. None of this is based on pinpoint accuracy. It’s fair to say that based on those assumption­s, higher income households would get about $1 trillion.

Finally, the Tax Foundation, a business-backed research group, took a different approach altogether. It looked not at whether taxes rose or fell, but how after-tax incomes changed. It found that every income group would be better off.

Our ruling

Warren said that under the Republican tax law, “the rich folks got $1.5 trillion.” During much of the tax cut debate, $1.5 trillion has been a shorthand measure of the ultimate cost of the bill.

Looking at how the tax cuts are spread around, there’s broad agreement that higher income people do best. Those making $200,000 or more get about half of the cuts.

There’s room to argue that a 50/50 split means those people get about $750 billion to $1 trillion over 10 years. But no model predicts they would get as much as Warren said, nor that they get all of the benefits.

She exaggerate­d the gains for the well-to-do. We rate this claim Half True.

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