One of the few pieces of major legislation enacted under former President Donald Trump was the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Many of the provisions in that law are set to expire in 2025, making it one of the biggest potential issues to be decided in next year’s presidential election. Some of Trump’s advisers are reportedly already discussing what a second term’s economic plan would include, and the only word I can find to describe what has surfaced so far is “Yikes.”
It would be one thing if Trump were only signaling that he just wants to keep the 2017 tax cuts in place, but apparently, he and his advisers also want to cut tax rates even deeper for individuals and corporations. The 2017 tax cuts were heavily skewed toward the top earners in the country and didn’t deliver on Trump’s promised deficit reduction. Even so, President Joe Biden has indicated that he’d like to see Congress keep the cuts for most households. Doing so would mean an additional estimated $1.5 trillion deficit over the next 10 years, which isn’t exactly the model of fiscal health, but at least Biden wants to raise taxes on the wealthy and corporations to offset those costs.
As for Trump’s new plan for further cuts, those cuts wouldn’t be paid for by taxing high-income earners or multibillion-dollar companies. Instead, in an idea Trump has floated on the campaign trail, the hole blown in the deficit would be covered with a massive 10% tariff on all goods imported into the U.S.
Could such a move raise billions for the federal government? Well, sort of. The tariffs against China during Trump’s term did double the tariff revenue collected from 2017 to 2019. But foreign exporters didn’t pay the majority of the tariffs, as Trump repeatedly and falsely claimed; those costs were borne mostly by American companies and consumers. And the vast majority of the money went right back out the door to bail out farmers who were caught up in the retaliatory tariffs China slapped on American agricultural goods.
Left unclear is what would be the point of raising the tariffs in the first place.
That’s small potatoes, though, compared to a potential plan former House Speaker and informal Trump adviser Newt Gingrich floated to The Washington Post. Gingrich, who sees himself as a real ideas man and promised during his 2012 presidential campaign to establish a permanent base on the moon, wants Trump to use Alaska’s oil revenue sharing as a model for how to distribute any new tariff revenue. Basically, the idea is to boost the U.S. economy by raising tariffs but then use all the resulting money to offset the costs of raising tariffs. Left unclear is what would be the point of raising the tariffs in the first place.








