Trump's tax plan is missing a number of important
details, by Bob Bryan, 4/26/17, business insider
The White House rolled
out the opening salvo of President Donald Trump's massive tax cut plan Wednesday, but the one-page set
of bullet points was missing some significant details.
The plan, laid out by Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin and National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn,
called for three new income-tax brackets, with rates of 10%, 25%, and 35%, down
from the current seven brackets.
What the plan does not detail are
the income levels associated with each bracket. Currently, for instance, a
joint filing couple making between $18,650 to $75,900 pays a 15%
marginal rate. It's unclear where that level of income would fall under
the Trump plan.
For instance, if the new bracket for
the 10% rate only extends to married couples making up to $75,000
annually, Americans making $75,001 could see that additional income be taxed at
the 25% marginal rate instead of the 15% rate. In response to a question, Cohn said
a family of four making $60,000 would have a lower tax rate, but did not
provide further details.
Another key missing detail pertains
to the repatriation tax. The one-time tax would allow companies to bring
profits held overseas back into the US at a lower tax rate. This isn't a new
idea: A similar repatriation was carried out under
President George W. Bush in 2004.
Unlike the earlier proposal, which taxed the money coming back in at 5.25%, the
new plan released on Wednesday did not provide any detail on the rate.
Republican congressional leaders said the
initial plan "will serve as critical guideposts for Congress and the Administration
as we work together to overhaul the American tax system." But many
economists decried the lack of details in the Trump plan.
"Nearly six months after the
election, the administration’s tax proposals amount to less than a single side
of paper," Paul Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics, said in
a note to clients following the release.
"The best that can be said is
that the president is laying out his opening bid in what could prove to be
a very long and fraught negotiation," Ashworth continued.
Citi analysts said the
announcement was an "an under-delivered 'big announcement' from the Trump
administration." Or as Brookings
Institution economist and New York Times columnist
Justin Wolfers put it, "I have been to interpretive dance performances
which contain more detail on the tax code."
http://www.businessinsider.com/trump-tax-cut-plan-details-2017-4
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