“A bill that cuts federal income taxes for middle-class families makes absolutely no sense, except as a sad way of camouflaging the real intent of the bill: Giving millions of dollars to the very wealthy, who happen to be the only people who are really benefiting from our uneven economic growth,” Rex Nutting
I wrote this Huffington Post piece in 2017 during President Trump’s first term when he passed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) that is set to expire but is being renewed if Republicans succeed in passing their new fiscal budget.
But in seeking to repeat Trump’s first term, Trump and his Republicans are regressing to an economic model that existed more than 100 years ago, and that is completely out of touch with the modern world.
His tax cut helped very few income earners, i.e., ordinary working folk. MarketWatch economist Rex Nutting calculated that those in the 60 percent middle-income brackets—from $32,000 to $140,000 per year—pay just an average 2.5 percent in income taxes. It’s only the richest 0.1 to 1 percent income earners that pay more and therefore want the huge tax cuts Congress and the Trump administration are proposing.
The TCJA renewal in 2025 will add at least $3 trillion to our federal debt in the next 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office, and raise our federal debt from 120 percent to as much as 130 to 150 percent of GDP because Republicans have no mechanism to pay for it, except higher import taxes from the tariffs and cuts to health care services such as Medicaid.
Hence the just announced sovereign debt downgrade of Moody’s AAA to Aaa, the last debt rating agency that held a AAA rating on U.S. Treasury debt, which will raise the cost of U.S, Treasury securities.
The tariff war that Trump illegally initiated with the dubious rationale that it will bring back a bygone era of manufacturing (Congress has the power to regulate tariffs during wartime emergencies but they have since allowed presidents to enact them during peacetime), will cause another period of stagflation as happened in the 1970s that took 10 years and double-digit interest rates to cure.
How soon voters and investors have forgotten what stagflation was like! The Federal Reserve under Chairman Paul Volcker raised its Fed Funds rate to 20 percent in the 1980s because inflation had risen to 14 percent rate and resulted in two back-to-back recessions under President Reagan.
“Top this off with another record for corporate profits, up 7.4 percent in a year, and there is no reason to be cutting their taxes,” I said in 2017. “They haven’t been using their profits for productive purposes, so what’s needed is for them to pay higher taxes so government can use that money to invest productively in the $2 trillion plus in outmoded infrastructure that badly needs replacement,”
And that’s precisely what the Biden administration did, pass bipartisan legislation that invested $2 trillion in the Infrastructure, CHIPs and Science, and Inflation Acts to modernize the U.S. economy.
Yet voters re-elected a man in Trump 2.0 that is returning the budget and tax cut debate to an earlier historical period. President Trump is now touting the need for another Gilded Age that prevailed in 1900 when tariffs protected fledgling industries.
Tariffs became less important with the introduction of income taxes in 1913 to support government services, and the trend since then has been downward to the very low rates that prevailed until now.
Then why have so many Americans re-elected someone who is only interested in reducing taxes to enrich himself and his Oligarchs; who has shown an almost total ignorance of basic economics (in maintaining a tariff isn’t an import tax) with a history of countless business failures, and that is causing investors to flee the US economy and impoverish the rest of us?
Will it take another recession to convince voters once again that One-man rule doesn’t work if Americans still want to live and prosper in a democracy?
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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