Orlando Sentinel

President Donald Trump

President says tax plan will keep same level of incentives

- By Marcy Gordon

promises “no change” to popular 401(k) retirement programs as the House sets an ambitious timetable for a tax overhaul.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump shot down a possible approach for raising revenue to finance tax cuts in politicall­y must-do legislatio­n for the Republican­s, promising Monday the popular 401(k) retirement program will be untouched.

As Republican­s hurtle toward producing a bill to overhaul the U.S. tax system, they’re scrambling to find new revenue sources to pay for anticipate­d tax cuts exceeding $1 trillion. A proposal to eliminate the widely used federal deduction for state and local taxes has run into heavy opposition from GOP House members from high-tax states, threatenin­g the enactment of tax legislatio­n that Republican­s deem essential to retaining their majority in next year’s elections.

Trump pledged in a tweet there will be “no change” to tax incentives for the 401(k) retirement programs.

The plan crafted by Trump and Republican leaders calls for steep tax cuts for corporatio­ns and potentiall­y individual­s, a doubling of the standard deduction used by most Americans, shrinking the number of tax brackets from seven to three or four, and the repeal of inheritanc­e taxes on multimilli­on-dollar estates. The child tax credit would be increased and the tax system would be simplified; most Americans would be able to file their income taxes on a postcard, according to the plan.

Crucial details of the plan have yet to be worked out, notably what income levels would fit with each tax bracket.

With the possibilit­y of the state and local deduction being at least partly preserved, some Republican lawmakers were considerin­g limiting the amount workers could contribute pretax in 401(k) retirement accounts.

“It was a trial balloon and it crashed,” said Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve Manhattan Institute. “They’re struggling to find legitimate offsets” for tax cuts.

“Everyone has been promised they are going to be better off with tax reform and that’s really hard to do in a fiscally responsibl­e way,” Riedl said.

Employees’ earnings from defined-contributi­on retirement plans such as 401(k)s aren’t taxed until retirement; pay-ins by both employers and employees also receive tax-preferred status. That cost the government $82.7 billion in lost revenue in the recent budget year — a potentiall­y juicy target for Republican tax-cutters.

With 55 million U.S. workers holding some $5 trillion in their 401(k) accounts, the plans have become a touchstone of retirement security for the middle class.

“This has always been a great and popular middle class tax break that works, and it stays!” Trump tweeted. “There will be NO change to your 401(k).”

Rep. Diane Black, RTenn., the chairwoman of the House Budget Committee, said of the Trumprejec­ted proposal on retirement plans: “There are still some dials that do have to be turned. This is a major effort and when you dial one thing you have to look at another.”

House Republican­s will be working to pass a budget this week so they can turn their attention to the tax overhaul.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP ?? President Donald Trump says the 401(k) offers a “middle class tax break that works.”
SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP President Donald Trump says the 401(k) offers a “middle class tax break that works.”

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