The Guardian (USA)

The worst part of Trump paying zero taxes? It's probably entirely legal

- Chuck Collins

Donald Trump’s tax returns are a stark illustrati­on of what’s broken with the US tax system: the tax code has one set of rules for the richest 0.1% and another for everyone else.

For the vast majority of taxpayers, the rules are straightfo­rward. If you earn a paycheck from an employer, odds are the majority of your taxes are already withheld, and your earnings are reported to the government. There’s little room for manipulati­on.

But the wealthier you are, the more of your money likely comes from non-wage income, business ownership interests and other complex assets – and the easier it is to game the system.

Many of these income sources are already taxed at lower rates than regular wages. But the richest 0.1% also hire “wealth defense industry” profession­als – tax lawyers, accountant­s, wealth planners – who mine the tax code for loopholes and shift assets to the shadows. As a result, the effective tax rate paid by the wealthiest US families fell below 25% over the last decade.

That’s less than most low- and middle-income people pay already. But even in this supremely privileged club, Trump’s tax avoidance stands out. With a series of tax bills ranging from $0 to just $750 of his alleged billions, Trump paid virtually 0% most years.

How? In part, Trump aggressive­ly used business tax deductions and charitable donations.

For instance, Trump “carried forward” losses from money-losing businesses from one year to the next, allowing him to claim the loss in multiple years. As a result, he paid no taxes in 10 out of 15 years between 2000 and 2015. On top of this, he deducted lavish lifestyle perks like private jets, luxury residences and $70,000 in hair styling as “business expenses.”

Trump also paid tax-deductible salaries and consulting fees to his children, a form of passing on wealth that avoids estate and gift taxes. In fact, it’s the same technique Trump’s father used decades earlier to transfer $413m

to Donald Trump himself.

Trump even found a way to deploy charitable tax deductions in a selfintere­sted manner. By donating developmen­t rights surroundin­g his personal mansion in Westcheste­r county, New York to a land conservanc­y, Trump created a taxpayer-subsidized buffer zone around his private property while collecting a $21.1m charity tax break.

Trump donated conservati­on easements in three other cases, including land around the Trump National Golf Club in Los Angeles. These transactio­ns accounted for the vast majority of his charity deductions over these years.

The attorney general of New York is investigat­ing several of these transactio­ns that may have deployed inflated appraisals.

Abuses like these make it all too clear: lawmakers need to restore the integrity of the tax code, with a focus on the manipulati­ons of top 0.1 percenters like Trump.

For example, there should be a time limit and financial cap on how much taxpayers should subsidize failing business ventures. Limiting the carry-forward of legitimate losses to six years is a reasonable period for viable enterprise­s. Similarly, there should be stricter scrutiny of deductions for excessive personal luxury expenditur­es as qualified business expenses – $70,000 on haircuts shouldn’t make the cut.

More fundamenta­lly, Congress should eliminate the preferenti­al treatment of income from capital over income from wages. There’s no reason stock gains, for example, should be taxed at a lower rate than workers’ paychecks. An easy first step would be to levy a 10% surtax on all income over $2m, whether from wages or investment­s. This would raise $635bn over a decade from those with the greatest capacity to pay.

Congress should also modernize rules governing charitable giving to eliminate the provisions for the selfdealin­g so well chronicled in Trump’s donation of conservati­on easements that enhance his personal property.

Congress should boost the IRS’s enforcemen­t resources to close the estimated $574bn gap in lost annual revenue from tax evasion and noncomplia­nce. Enforcemen­t should focus on the richest 1%, who are responsibl­e for roughly 70% of tax underrepor­ting, according to one study.

Investment­s in new technology and enforcemen­t could bring in $24 in revenue for every $1 invested. If the laser focus is on the richest 0.1% of households and cracking down on many of the devices deployed by Trump, the potential benefits could be even greater. Then, Congress could turn its attention to further restoring progressiv­ity to the federal tax system, legislatin­g an annual wealth tax, strengthen­ing the estate tax, and equalizing capital gains and income tax rates.

The integrity of the US tax system has hit a new low, with the revelation­s that a sitting president is tax-avoider-in-chief. The Trump tax playbook should serve as a catalyst for reform.

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters ?? ‘With a series of tax bills ranging from $0 to just $750 of his alleged billions, Trump paid virtually 0% most years.’
Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters ‘With a series of tax bills ranging from $0 to just $750 of his alleged billions, Trump paid virtually 0% most years.’

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