Trump’s Tax Plan: The Best, Most Luxurious Tax Plan For Those Already Living In Luxury Sep 28, 2015 | By CAP Action War Room Donald Trump Releases His Tax Plan, A 'Uge Tax Cut For The Wealthiest Few Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump released his tax plan today and—shocking no one familiar with American politics—analysis by the Center For American Progress Action Fund shows the plan would be another 'uge windfall for the wealthiest few. In fact, Trump's family stands to gain more from his plan than almost anyone, with the elimination of the estate tax giving the Trump family a tax cut of up to $3.48 billion, and the dramatic cut to the corporate tax rate also benefitting the family. The "losers" under Trump's plan will be anyone that relies on Medicare, Medicaid, or investment in things like infrastructure, education or job training—in other words middle class families. Like Jeb! Bush before him, Trump makes the tired argument that his tax plan is focused on the middle class, when in fact it is a big, beautiful tax cut for the wealthy. Here are three ways the plan favors the wealthy few at the expense of the middle class: A simply tremendous gift to his kids. Among the biggest beneficiaries of Trump's pitch to eliminate the estate tax? The Trumps themselves. The estate tax only applies to estates worth $5.43 million, and only two out of every one thousand estates pay any estate tax at all. - Eliminating the current 40% estate tax could mean that Trump's kids could stand to save as much as $3.48 billion in estate taxes—given Trump's claimed net worth of $8.7 billion.
- Because it is easy for wealthy people to use loopholes to lower their estate tax bills, using a more cautious estimate that assumes Trump pays near the average estate tax rate of 18.8 percent, Trump's plan would result in giving his kids $1.64 billion.
The best, most luxurious tax plan for those living in luxury. Trump's tax plan would slash corporate, individual income, and capital gains and dividends tax rates—three moves that give bigger boosts to the nation's richest. - The top 20 percent of taxpayers pay 78.6 percent of the country's corporate taxes—meaning a tax cut on corporate income would be a huge boost for them, but do little to nothing for the other 80 percent.
- Trump would cut the top individual tax rate from 39.6 percent to 25 percent—even lower than Jeb Bush's proposed top individual rate of 28 percent. An analysis by the Center for Tax Justice predicts that the top one percent of Americans would see an average break of $184,000 a year under Trump's plan, compared to an average annual cut of only $250 for the bottom 20 percent.
- Trump's plan to cut tax rates on income from capital gains and dividends is yet another gift to the nation's wealthiest people. The 400 richest taxpayers alone received 12 percent of all capital gains income and 8 percent of all dividend income. As shown in a recent Center for American Progress report, a lower tax rate on dividends and capital gains is one of the ways the U.S. tax code worsens inequality by helping those who are wealthy enough to own capital accumulate even more wealth.
- Even the hedge fund managers who Trump says are "getting away with murder" might get a tax cut on their carried interest. Trump claims to close this loophole, but if investment funds pay taxes as businesses their tax rate on carried interests would fall from 23.8% to 15%. And even if Trump requires hedge funds to pay taxes using his individual rates, taxes on carried interest would only go up from 23.8% to 25%. Not to mention the fact that Trump would still give hedge fund managers huge tax cuts on the rest of their income.
A 'uge increase to the deficit. Trump claims that his plan "doesn't add to our debt and deficit," but any reasoned analysis of the plan suggests that it would be extremely costly. The plan jeopardizes programs that working and middle class families depend on for economic security, like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. - The Center for Tax Justice estimates that Trump's plan would cost $10 trillion over the next 10 years.
- Though the plans vary in some ways, Bush's and Trump's plans pledge to make some very similar tax cuts, which would inevitably force budget cuts from crucial programs. And even the team of advisors Bush recruited to support his plan say that it would cost $3.4 trillion over the next ten years.
BOTTOM LINE: Despite Trump's populist rhetoric, his tax plan would only be the best, most luxurious tax plan for those already living in luxury. It gives his own family a potential $3.48 billion tax cut, jeopardizing programs that middle class families depend on for economic security along the way. Like CAP Action on Facebook and follow us on Twitter |
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