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Here Is The Leaked Trump Tax Plan
Newz ^
| 09/27/2017
Posted on 09/27/2017 8:56:15 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
This afternoon, during a speech in Indianapolis, President Trump was expected to reveal, for the first time, the details of the long-anticipated Republican tax reform proposal that calls for substantial business and individual tax cuts. But in a political era where every little thing is leaked to the media, we no longer have to wait for presidential speeches to learn the details of key pieces of legislation. As such, below is a 9-page summary of Trump's tax plan courtesy of the latest leaks.
Here are the highlights:
GOALS
The Trump Administration, the House Committee on Ways and Means, and the Senate Committee on Finance have developed a unified framework to achieve pro-American, fiscally-responsible tax reform. This framework will deliver a 21st century tax code that is built for growth, supports middle-class families, defends our workers, protects our jobs, and puts America first. It will deliver fiscally responsible tax reform by broadening the tax base, closing loopholes and growing the economy. It includes:
- Tax relief for middle-class families.
- The simplicity of postcard tax filing for the vast majority of Americans.
- Tax relief for businesses, especially small businesses.
- Ending incentives to ship jobs, capital, and tax revenue overseas.
- Broadening the tax base and providing greater fairness for all Americans by closing special interest tax breaks and loopholes.
Personal Tax Rates: As expected, Trump's plan includes a doubling of standard deductions with a consolidation of tax brackets and the suggestion that a new top end bracket may be created to "ensure that the reformed tax code is at least as progressive as the existing tax code and does not shift the tax burden from high-income to lower- and middle-income taxpayers."
The framework simplifies the tax code and provides tax relief by roughly doubling the standard deduction to:
- $24,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly, and
- $12,000 for single filers.
Under current law, taxable income is subject to seven tax brackets. The framework aims to consolidate the current seven tax brackets into three brackets of 12%, 25% and 35%.
Typical families in the existing 10% bracket are expected to be better off under the framework due to the larger standard deduction, larger child tax credit and additional tax relief that will be included during the committee process.
An additional top rate may apply to the highest-income taxpayers to ensure that the reformed tax code is at least as progressive as the existing tax code and does not shift the tax burden from high-income to lower- and middle-income taxpayers.
Alternative Minimum Tax: Eliminated.
The nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Taxpayer Advocate have both recommended repealing the AMT because it no longer serves its intended purpose and creates significant complexity. This framework substantially simplifies the tax code by repealing the existing individual AMT, which requires taxpayers to do their taxes twice.
Itemized Deductions: Keeps home mortgage interest and charitable deductions but eliminates all others including the "State and Local Tax" deduction which will mostly impact folks in the high-tax blue states of New York, New Jersey and California (but our understanding is that NY, NJ and CA residents want to pay higher taxes...so it's really a win for everyone).
In order to simplify the tax code, the framework eliminates most itemized deductions, but retains tax incentives for home mortgage interest and charitable contributions.
Death Tax: Eliminates "death tax" and generation-skipping transfer tax.
Small Business Tax Rates: Capped at 25%
The framework limits the maximum tax rate applied to the business income of small and family owned businesses conducted as sole proprietorships, partnerships and S corporations to 25%.
Corporate Tax Rates: Reduced to 20%
The framework reduces the corporate tax rate to 20% which is below the 22.5% average of the industrialized world. In addition, it aims to eliminate the corporate AMT, as recommended by the non-partisan JCT. The committees also may consider methods to reduce the double taxation of corporate earnings.
Capital Investment Expensing: Immediate expensing.
The framework allows businesses to immediately write off (or expense) the cost of new investments in depreciable assets other than structures made after September 27, 2017, for at least five years.
C-Corp Interest Expense: Caps interest expense deduciton via some yet TBD formula.
The deduction for net interest expense incurred by C corporations will be partially limited. The committees will consider the appropriate treatment of interest paid by non-corporate taxpayers.
Repatriation: Enacts "100% exemption" for dividends from foreign subsidiaries
The framework transforms our existing offshoring model to an American model. It ends the perverse incentive to keep foreign profits offshore by exempting them when they are repatriated to the United States. It will replace the existing, outdated worldwide tax system with a 100% exemption for dividends from foreign subsidiaries (in which the U.S. parent owns at least a 10% stake).
To transition to this new system, the framework treats foreign earnings that have accumulated overseas under the old system as repatriated. Accumulated foreign earnings held in illiquid assets will be subject to a lower tax rate than foreign earnings held in cash or cash equivalents. Payment of the tax liability will be spread out over several years.
Noticeably absent in Trump's tax plan is any mention of the treatment of "carried interest"...a hot-button topic for hedge funds and private equity managers that reap the rewards of having the majority of their income treated at "capital gains" rather than "personal income."
Of course, the real question is whether the bill has even the slightest chance of passing both houses of Congress or if will soon meet the same fate as the failed Obamacare repeal bills.
And the initial market reaction seems to be disappointment...
* * *
Update 1: To our complete 'shock', Democrats have already taken to the media to bash Trump's tax proposal as a "windfall for the weathly" even though the plan explicitly contemplates a new top end personal tax bracket to "ensure that the reformed
tax code is at least as progressive as the existing tax code and does
not shift the tax burden from high-income to lower- and middle-income
taxpayers."
SCHUMER: GOP TAX PROPOSALS WON'T FLY WITH AMERICAN PEOPLE
SCHUMER: GOP TAX PROPOSALS WOULD RESULT IN WINDFALL FOR WEALTHY
WYDEN: GOP TAX PLAN BREAKS TRUMP PLEDGE THAT RICH WOULDN'T GAIN'
Meanwhile, Senator Wyden somehow concluded that a "lack of detail" necessarily confirms that the middle class is about to get screwed by the Trump administration...we're waiting to hear from Wyden on whether that lack of detail also confirms that Trump colluded with the Russians in 2016.
WYDEN: LACK OF DETAIL IN PLAN MEANS MIDDLE-CLASS WILL BE HIT
And, of course, Pelosi had to chime in by stringing together a series of buzz words to form non-sensical statements:
PELOSI: GOP WILL GO AFTER SOC. SEC, MEDICARE TO PAY FOR PLAN
PELOSI: GOP STILL PURSUING TRICKLE-DOWN AGENDA
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: fake; fakenews; fakenewsblog; gop; imayhavemadeamistake; tax; taxplan; trump; yourblogsucks
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To: DoodleDawg
It didn’t even occur to me that I don’t get to deduct my property taxes. Okay, I need to do some math here now.
Are the child tax credits untouched?
41
posted on
09/27/2017 11:37:02 AM PDT
by
WVMnteer
To: Mike-o-Matic
I’d need to see what doubling the standard deduction would do to the bottom line but lowering the rate to 25% doesn’t do jack ultimately, especially if the state and local deduction goes away for the full-year (personal) filing. Not sure but it’s not the home run plan I was hoping for so far.
42
posted on
09/27/2017 11:46:01 AM PDT
by
NohSpinZone
(First thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers)
To: WVMnteer
Are the child tax credits untouched? Increased to a yet-to-be-determined amount.
To: WVMnteer
People are going to flip the hell out over not being able to deduct their state and local taxes. Im in Texas now so Im happily unaffected by that. I'm pretty sure your property tax is included in "local taxes". I own a home in Taylor county. Taxes are ~$5K a year. Prob won't be able to deduct it.
To: WVMnteer
Really good point there too. I’m in California and we’re doubly screwed - high income and property tax (because of the high cost of housing). I would need to check with the CPA to see if doubling the standard deduction to $24K would offset most of these deductions going away.
Of course, residents of Nevada and Texas, etc. would be sitting pretty!
45
posted on
09/27/2017 11:54:07 AM PDT
by
NohSpinZone
(First thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers)
To: Getsmart64
Yea, that flew by my head at first.
I also have no idea what bracket I’m in under this plan.
So....I dunno.
46
posted on
09/27/2017 11:54:55 AM PDT
by
WVMnteer
To: NohSpinZone
Maybe. We’re a high property tax state and - in theory - you can itemize our 8 percent sales tax but I don’t know anyone who really does that.
This doesn’t feel completely integrated yet.
47
posted on
09/27/2017 11:58:22 AM PDT
by
WVMnteer
To: WVMnteer
It’s going to be EXTREMELY interesting to see the likes of Moonbeam Brown and Kamala Harris fight for tax deductions for the “wealthy”! Because that’s exactly what’s at play here. Cuomo in NY is already moaning about this being a “death blow” to his state.
Forget the obvious solution of getting spending in order in those states so that they can reduce the state income taxes. Naaaaaaaaah, why would you when you can have the rest of the country subsidize your profligate spending?
48
posted on
09/27/2017 12:42:03 PM PDT
by
NohSpinZone
(First thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers)
To: NohSpinZone
Okay. So, this is not a bad plan; it’s yet again 4D chess.
I can’t wait for all these 4D chess games to come together and lead to a bill being passed. Someday, it is bound to happen.
49
posted on
09/27/2017 1:04:32 PM PDT
by
WVMnteer
To: SeekAndFind
Well OK.
Good = cut in corporate tax rates; something he spoke quite specifically on and will be great for the economy and the markets
Unsure = why is he increasing tax rates to 12% WTF?
Bad = Why would a Republican want to add more to the non-tax paying roles, thus adding to Democrat voters? Increasing standard deductions will yank even more from paying taxes which enforces the Tocqueville formula
Comment = In what Waldo world do small business pay higher taxes than corporations? No wonder the US is increasingly a corporatist state. As a populist with so many big corporations campaigning against him, Trump should be INCREASING tax rates for those SOBs, and cut it on small and middle classes. Does the GOP Congress hate the entrepreneur middle class that much?
To: No Socialist
Yup. Capped? LOL. Just confirms how much the swamp hate the middle class and love their Chamber of Commerce donors. Is the GOP now the party of the corporatist Goldman Sachs state?
To: NohSpinZone
It is total bullshit, and I feel for you as an entrepreneur. Is the America of the inventors and creators or the America of the Robber Barons?
To: No Socialist
Never did make sense. Not intended to. Just wish I had back all those years of 38% I paid in s corp taxes.
53
posted on
09/27/2017 8:48:01 PM PDT
by
Sequoyah101
(It feels like we have exchanged our dreams for survival. We just have a few days that don't suck.)
To: NohSpinZone
The personal exemption would be eliminated, too, so the doubling of standard deduction isn’t all that impressive. This is particularly true for some group of people whose rate will go UP from 10% to 12%. Everything depends where the bracket breakpoints are IMHO.
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