Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The tax man cometh

- ALBERT R. HUNT Albert R. Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist.

The Trump tax plan, unveiled in one sketchy page, is like a bottle of bad wine. It’s not aging well. Central questions remain unanswered. The White House says it will fill in the important details later, in the meantime pushing dubious and duplicitou­s claims.

Three illustrati­ons make the point. Administra­tion officials won’t say whether the personal exemption would be eliminated, hardly an arcane detail. They falsely suggest that the plan will increase taxes on some wealthy investors by eliminatin­g a tax loophole used by executives of hedge funds and private-equity firms known as “carried interest.” And they rely on the dubious assumption that Congress will no longer allow state and local taxes to be deducted from federal taxes.

Trump advisers insist that big cuts in tax rates would pay for themselves by generating strong economic growth, a highly speculativ­e claim, to put it gently. They also claim they’d add revenue by eliminatin­g most tax deductions, though not the politicall­y popular write-offs for charitable contributi­ons and home mortgage interest. But the plan doesn’t specify which deductions would go, citing only the ones for state and local taxes paid.

Don’t hold your breath. There are 35 Republican congressme­n from the high-tax states of California, New York, New Jersey and Illinois, and some of them are already balking. With a 22-vote margin in the House of Representa­tives and with no Democratic support, Republican leaders will be dealing with some brutal arithmetic when it comes to eliminatin­g state and local tax deductions. Buy some more red ink. The idea of ending the carried-interest loophole was pushed hard by Trump during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign as he sought to establish his populist credential­s. His advisers have run with that theme, claiming they’re ready to end that special tax break, which lets hedge-fund and private-equity executives pay lower capital-gains rates instead of the regular rates on ordinary income.

But the Trump proposal would reduce the top corporate rate to 15 percent from 35 percent, meaning it would be lower than the maximum capital-gains rate. Because many hedge funds and private-equity firms are partnershi­ps, their executives would qualify for the corporate rate under the administra­tion plan. So ultimately their taxes on carried interest would be cut, not increased.

So much for populism.

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