Republicans aim to make individual tax cuts permanent

By Marcy Gordon, The Associated Press | July 24, 2018 | Last updated on July 24, 2018
3 min read

House Republicans have launched an effort to expand the massive tax law they muscled through Congress last year, aiming to make permanent the individual tax cuts and small-business income deductions now set to expire in 2026.

The pre-midterm elections push, which clicked into gear Tuesday, is portrayed as championing the middle class and small businesses. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, who heads the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said making the tax cuts permanent would build on the tax law’s economic boost by adding 1.5 million new jobs and increasing wages.

With the elections about four months away, polls are showing mixed support among voters for the $1.5 trillion package of individual and corporate tax cuts that President Donald Trump signed into law as his marquee legislative achievement.

A fresh round of tax proposals are aimed at giving Republican lawmakers a selling point as they prepare to leave Washington to campaign in their districts.

“It’s going to identify Republican priorities,” said Marc Gerson, a former majority tax counsel for the Ways and Means Committee.

Read: How Trump’s new tax act hurts Americans in Canada

The new Republican outline also calls for new tax incentives for savings, by creating a “universal savings account” for families and allowing the popular tax-free 529 college savings accounts to also be used to pay for apprenticeship fees and home schooling expenses, as well as paying off student debt. In addition, workers would be able to tap their retirement savings accounts without tax penalty to cover expenses from the birth of a child or an adoption.

Start-up businesses would be permitted to write off more of their initial costs.

“We plan to work off this framework to build on the growing successes of the (tax law) and ensure this energized economy continues moving forward,” Brady said in a statement.

The tax law that took effect Jan. 1, the most sweeping rewrite of the U.S. tax code in three decades, provides steep tax cuts for corporations and the wealthiest Americans, and more modest reductions for middle- and low-income individuals and families.

While the law slashed the corporate tax rate permanently from 35% to 21%, its tax cuts for individuals and the millions of U.S. “pass-through” businesses expire in eight years. The “pass-through” businesses pipeline their income to owners and other individuals, who then pay personal income tax on those earnings, not the corporate rate. They are allowed under the new law to deduct 20% of the first $315,000 of their earnings.

Also until 2026, the tax law ended the $4,050 personal exemption for individuals, and capped at $10,000 the amount of property taxes or state or local taxes that consumers can deduct on their federal returns.

Early this year, millions of working Americans got a boost from the tax law as they saw increases in their paychecks with less tax withheld by employers. But as Trump’s populist attacks against free trade have erupted into trade wars with China and U.S. allies, trade tensions have overshadowed the tax cuts in economically vulnerable areas of the country that depend on exports.

With retaliation against U.S.-made products such as blue jeans, motorcycles and whiskey, many of the hardest-hit states are those that were won by Trump in the 2016 election. Some in the business community have warned that the positive impact on the economy from the tax cuts could be eroded by harm inflicted by trade disputes.

Also read:

U.S. tax reform affecting Canada’s competitiveness, growth: OECD

Tax burden makes Canada less competitive: survey

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Marcy Gordon, The Associated Press

Marcy Gordon is a reporter with The Associated Press,  an American not-for-profit news agency headquartered in New York City and founded in 1846.