Monday, December 11, 2017

Paul Krugman: Trump and Ryan Versus the Little People



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Paul Krugman: Trump and Ryan Versus the Little People // Economist's View
http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2017/11/paul-krugman-trump-and-ryan-versus-the-little-people.html

"The end result of this tax bill would be to leave most working Americans, even those who wouldn't face direct tax increases, worse off, all for the benefit of a tiny minority":

Trump and Ryan Versus the Little People, by Paul Krugman, NY Times: According to news reports, Donald Trump wanted the House Republican tax "reform" bill to be called the Cut Cut Cut Act. Alas, he didn't get his wish, and it was instead given a boring name nobody can remember. But there's still time to change it! So let me propose, as one reader suggested, that it be renamed the Leona Helmsley Act, after the New York hotelier convicted of tax evasion, who famously declared that "only the little people pay taxes."

That, after all, is the main thrust of the bill. It hugely favors the wealthy over the middle class, which is pretty much always true of Republican proposals. But it's not just about favoring high incomes: It also systematically favors people who live off their assets, especially inherited wealth, over the little people — that is, poor shlubs who actually have to work for a living. ...

So when Gary Cohn, Trump's top economic adviser, says that the bill's goal is "to deliver middle-class tax cuts to the hard-working families in this country," he's claiming that up is down and black is white. This bill does little or nothing for the middle class, and even among the affluent it's biased against those who work hard in favor of the idle rich.

Also let's not forget that tax increases on working Americans are only part of the story. This bill would also, according to the Congressional Budget Office, add $1.7 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. You know what that means: If this bill or anything like it passes, Republicans will immediately revert to their previous pretense of being deficit hawks and start demanding spending cuts.

And since federal spending is dominated by programs — Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid — that benefit the middle and working classes, the end result of this tax bill would be to leave most working Americans, even those who wouldn't face direct tax increases, worse off, all for the benefit of a tiny minority, especially those who haven't even worked for their wealth.

You might wonder how Republicans imagine that they can get away with this. But anyone who has paid attention to U.S. politics knows the answer. First, they will lie, unashamedly, about what their bill actually does. Second, they will try to distract working-class voters by stoking racial animosity. That didn't work too well in Tuesday's elections, but they'll keep on trying.


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