Pinned between a populist uprising led by Donald Trump, a wealthy donor base demanding lower taxes and a whole lot of family baggage, Republican presidential hopeful Jeb Bush debuted a new tax plan on Wednesday that seeks to satisfy all comers. The proposal includes something for everyone: new tax breaks for the rich, even bigger ones for corporations, a gentle poke at Wall Street and a variety of new goodies for middle-class and low-income taxpayers.
The catch? Experts say some of the changes could dramatically explode the deficit. The conservative Tax Foundation estimated its price at a whopping $3.66 trillion over 10 years using traditional scoring methods and $1.6 trillion using dynamic scoring, which assumes conservative arguments that the cuts will unleash a surge of economic growth are correct. The gains would also be concentrated among the wealthy elite — the static score found that the richest 1% of Americans would enjoy an 11.6% gain in after-tax income, the richest 10% would get a 4.7% boost, and the bottom 80% would see a more modest bump between 1% and 3%.
The top line numbers are largely in line with an analysis by economists John Cogan, Martin Feldstein, Glenn Hubbard and Kevin Warsh distributed by the Bush campaign that pegged its cost at $3.4 trillion under static scoring and $1.2 trillion under their dynamic model. A number of independent groups are currently working on estimates of their own.
Under Bush’s proposal, the current tax system for individuals would be collapsed into just three brackets: 10%, 25% and 28%. The current code, after a tax hike on the wealthy under President Obama, consists of seven brackets with a top rate of 39.6%. The corporate tax rate would be dramatically lowered from 35% to 20% and allow companies to deduct capital investments. Bush would pay for the changes (at least in part) by eliminating and capping various deductions that taxpayers use to reduce their effective rates today. In some cases, he would limit deductions that disproportionately benefit wealthier individuals. The individual changes would cost $2.2 trillion, per the Tax Foundation, while the corporate changes would cost $1.1 trillion. The remaining $238 billion loss would come from eliminating the estate tax.
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In crafting his plan, Bush seems to have incorporated lessons from previous Republican campaign tax pitches, most notably his brother George W. Bush and the previous Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney.
Observers noted on Wednesday that the framework has a lot in common with Romney’s 2012 proposal, which also had a 28% top rate and reduced corporate taxes to 25%. That plan ended up being a millstone around Romney’s neck after the independent Tax Policy Center determined Romney’s policies would either violate his pledge to keep tax reform revenue neutral or his pledge not to raise taxes on the middle class.
Unlike Romney, however, Bush hasn’t made any pledge to keep his tax plan revenue neutral, which gives him vast freedom to spread the wealth around. Bush indicated on CNBC Wednesday that he plans to factor into its cost an assumed bonanza of economic growth – he’s set a goal of 4% per year – that economists are highly skeptical would be achieved through the tax changes. Bush mocked the “bean counters in Washington” who instead favored traditional scoring methods used by Congress for decades to evaluate legislation.
“I struggle to see how this won’t add to the deficit when scored statically,” said Anthony Nitti, a tax partner at WithumSmith+Brown, who has been tracking candidate’s proposals.
This flexibility allows Bush to expand on Romney’s vision with new benefits that explicitly benefit middle-class and lower-income taxpayers, including an expansion of the standard deduction by $5,000 per person and a boost to the Earned Income Tax Credit to cover childless low-income workers (an idea Democrats have suggested as well). Ideas like these are likely to play well with so-called reform conservatives, a group of conservative intellectuals who have pushed party leaders to emphasize tax cuts that benefit the 99%.
One notable effect of these changes would be to add to the famous “47%” of Americans Romney identified during the 2012 campaign who pay no income taxes. This is a feature, not a bug: Bush boasts that his plan would eliminate taxes for some 15 million more Americans.
“Bush is positioning himself as the anti-Romney by seeking to add to the number of taxpayers who don’t have a tax liability,” Nitti said.
As Nitti noted, though, this puts him at odds with conservatives who have used the “47%” line as a rallying cry to complain that too many Americans pay no taxes. Some on the right have advocated for an alternate taxation system in response based on a flat rate across all incomes or on taxing consumption, which would reduce the tax burden on the rich and spread it more evenly among Americans.
This isn’t the only area where Bush breaks from Romney. He also joined GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump in proposing to scrap the carried interest tax break, which benefits hedge fund managers. Democrats took Romney to task for refusing to call for an end to the loophole in 2012. The change gives Bush a hint of populist cover for his boast that his plan “works whether you’re on Main Street or Wall Street.
“It’s symbolically important because the anti-Wall Street crowd has made a big deal out of it, but in terms of actual revenue its pretty small: just $1 (billion) to $2 billion a year,” William Gale, co-director of the Tax Policy Center, told msnbc.
“You could argue the carried interest is a fig leaf compared to the broader tax cuts in the plan,” Matt Gardner, executive director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy.








