Plus: Harris's fiscal edge
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Happy Friday the 13th! Itâs been quite a week! Former President Donald Trump held a [news conference]( at his golf course in the Los Angeles area a day after pitching another tax cut meant to appeal to working-class voters: no taxes on overtime wages. That proposal comes on top of earlier pledges to end taxes on tips and Social Security income. Trump today defended his association with a controversial [conspiracy theorist]( and his repeating [debunked claims]( about migrants eating pets. He also may have opened the door a crack to another debate against Vice President Kamala Harris, despite having explicitly ruled out the possibility just hours earlier. âMaybe if I got in the right mood, I donât know,â he [said](. Harris spent the afternoon and evening at back-to-back rallies in Republican-leaning parts of Pennsylvania, where she touted her plans for an âopportunity economyâ and help for small businesses. Hereâs what else you should know. Trump at his news conference (Reuters) Trump Says Heâll Push to End Taxes on Overtime Pay
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has found another tax he wants to eliminate: federal taxes on overtime pay. Campaigning on Thursday in Tucson, Arizona, Trump told supporters that his new proposal would reward people who work longer hours and incentivize them to do so. âThe people who work overtime are among the hardest-working citizens in our country, and for too long no one in Washington has been looking out for them,â he said. âIf youâre an overtime worker, when youâre past 40 hours a week, think of that, your overtime hours will be tax-free.â Trump provided no details on how the tax break would work, but the proposal joins a list of other vaguely defined proposed cuts that now includes taxes on Social Security benefits and tip income, as well as an extension of the 2017 individual tax cuts that are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025. Taken together, Trumpâs proposed tax cuts would cost upwards of $6 trillion in lost revenues over 10 years. Experts not thrilled: Not surprisingly, Trumpâs opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, didnât appear to be impressed, although she may feel pressure to imitate his pledge eventually, as she did with his proposal to eliminate taxes on tips. âHe is desperate and scrambling and saying whatever it takes to try to trick people into voting for him,â Joseph Costello, a Harris campaign spokesman, told [The Wall Street Journal](. âIf he takes power again, he will only look out for himself and his billionaire buddies and their big corporations.â Some Republicans also expressed their doubts. Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who led the Congressional Budget Office during the George W. Bush administration and now works at a conservative think tank, criticized Trumpâs approach for its lack of logic. âThe 180-degree transformation from Reagan to Trump is now completeâfrom low tax rates on a principled definition of income to zero tax rate on a completely unprincipled definition of income,â he told the Journal. âTax policy by drunken sailors would be more disciplined.â An [analysis]( by the conservative Tax Foundation found that on a static basis â that is, without accounting for changes in behavior and dynamic feedback â eliminating federal income taxes on overtime would cost $227 billion over 10 years. If the cut included payroll taxes used to fund Social Security and Medicare, another $145 billion would be lost. However, the change would likely drive significant changes in behavior, which, when modeled by the Tax Foundation, add up to a revenue loss of more than $1 trillion. More broadly, the Tax Foundation analysts criticized the seemingly random nature of Trumpâs proposal. âFrom a tax policy perspective, there is no principled reason to treat income derived from overtime work any differently than income earned from a taxpayerâs first 40 hours of work,â they wrote. âIn short, exempting overtime would unnecessarily complicate the tax code, increase compliance and administrative costs, and reduce neutrality by favoring certain work arrangements over others.â Other critics noted that the proposal would be easy to abuse. âTrumpâs claim that he would exempt overtime from taxes is deeply unserious. This policy would be incredibly easy to game,â [said]( Heidi Shierholz, who heads the liberal Economic Policy Institute. âEmployers could (and would) easily switch salaried, overtime-ineligible workers to hourlyâand set the hourly wage so that, with overtime, they are paying no more than they paid beforeâand allow their workers to get the tax cut.â Shierholz added that the winners from the plan would likely be high-income. â[A] huge share of the expenditures on this tax exemption would go to very highly paid workers,â she said. âAnd good lord, big-firm lawyers would love this.â Column of the Day: Harrisâs Fiscal Edge
The federal budget deficit was mentioned just twice in Tuesdayâs presidential debate (both times by Vice President Kamala Harris). Natasha Sarin, a contributing columnist at The Washington Post and former Treasury Department official in the Biden administration, [writes]( that the relative lack of attention to the fiscal outlook is âunfortunate, because the issue is pressing.â Sarin writes that on the issue of the deficit and national debt, thereâs a sizable difference between Harris and former President Donald Trump. âTrumpâs proposals would add at least $4.5 trillion to the deficit over the next decade,â she writes. âIn contrast, Harris could actually achieve some deficit reduction depending upon how much of the GOP tax cuts she opts to extend. At worst, her plan would increase deficits only modestly, by less than one-fifth of the Trump total.â The difference is the result of proposed tax plans. Trump is promising more tax cuts, including lowering the corporate rate from 21% to 15% for qualifying companies. Harris supports higher taxes on top earners and large corporations, but cuts for low- and middle-income earners. As Sarin writes: âHarris has been clear that she embraces essentially all of the tax increases outlined in President Joe Bidenâs budget, with the exception of his capital tax changes. (She would raise capital gains rates for high earners by less than Biden has proposed.) Overall, these proposals would generate around $5 trillion in additional tax revenue from the wealthy and corporations over the next decade.â Sarin also pushes back on the idea that Trumpâs tax cuts can pay for themselves. âThe best empirical evidence on the impact of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is that economic growth offset just two percentage points of [the 41 percent decrease in corporate tax collections]( that resulted from the legislation,â she says. âDoubling down on those approaches will be just as problematic for our nationâs finances.â The bottom line, Sarin argues, should be obvious to fiscally focused voters: âAny fair fiscal comparison shows this election is not a close call. If the deficit is your top issue, Harris is the clear choice.â [Read the full column at The Washington Post.]( Number of the Day: 3.8%
The Census Bureau said Thursday that the cost of renting â rent plus the average monthly cost of utilities and fuels adjusted for inflation â grew at a 3.8% annual pace in 2023, which was faster that the rise in real median home values (1.8%) for the first time in 10 years. âThis marked the largest annual real increase in rental costs since at least 2011,â the Census Bureauâs Jacob Fabina [wrote](. âDespite this large spike, the share of renter income spent on rent and utilities remained at 31.0% in 2023, an indication that renter household incomes kept pace with rent hikes.â --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com.
--------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal News Roundup - [First 2 Post-Debate Polls Roll In; Harris Continues to Lead Nationally]( â Washington Post
- [Next Up in Trumpâs No-Tax Zone: Overtime Pay]( â Wall Street Journal
- [Trump Complicates Speaker Johnsonâs Plan to Avoid Government Shutdown]( â The Hill
- [Trump Vows âLarge Deportationsâ From Springfield, Ohio, if Elected]( â Washington Post
- [Bomb Threats Disrupt Springfield, Ohio for Second Day Amid False Right-Wing Claims]( â Time
- [âThis Has to Stopâ: Biden Condemns Attacks on Haitian US Immigrants]( â Gurdian
- [Biden Requests Extension for Delivering $5.8 Billion in Ukraine Aid]( â The Hill
- [Trump Threatens to Cut Off California Wildfire Aid if Newsom Doesnât Change Water Policy]( â The Hill
- [Too Much? Many Americans Feel the Need to Limit Their Political News, AP-NORC/USAFacts Poll Finds]( â Associated Press
- [Big Steelmaker Weighs Abandoning $500M Biden Climate Grant]( â Politico
- [Feds Rarely Punish Hospitals for Turning Away Pregnant Patients]( â Associated Press
- [Arkansasâ Gov Says Medicaid Extension for New Moms Isnât Needed. Advisers Disagree]( â NPR Views and Analysis - [How Would Trump and Harris Affect U.S. Debt? The Difference Is Huge]( â Natasha Sarin, Washington Post
- [Trumpâs Proposed Overtime Tax Exemption Would Distort Work Decisions]( â Garrett Watson and Erica York, Tax Foundation
- [Trump, Tariffs and the Truth About His Economic Plans]( â Binyamin Appelbaum, New York Times (podcast)
- [After Project 2025, Knives Are Out for Heritage â On the Right]( â Michael Schaffer, Politico
- [Trump Wants Elon Musk Focused on Government 'Efficiency.' Critics Say Key Services, Perhaps Social Security, Could Be in His Sights]( â Ben Werschkul, Yahoo Finance
- [Hereâs Why Trump Was Forced to Say He Has Only âConcepts of a Planâ]( â Paul Krugman, New York Times
- [The Fed Has No Choice but to Assume the Worst]( â Jonathan Levin, Bloomberg
- [Trumpâs New Big Lie]( â David A. Graham, Atlantic
- [Is There More to JD Vanceâs MAGA Alliance Than Meets the Eye?]( â Ian Ward, Politico
- [How a Naked Man on a Tropical Island Created Our Current Political Insanity]( â Michael Hirschorn, New York Times Copyright © 2024 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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