https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-fr...tself-in-2018/
While some TCJA supporters are touting that nominal revenues were higher in fiscal year (FY) 2018 than in FY2017, that comparison does not address the question of TCJA’s effects. Nominal revenues rise because of inflation and economic growth. Adjusted for inflation, total revenues fell from FY2017 to FY2018 (Figure 1). Adjusted for the size of the economy, they fell even more. The most appropriate test of the revenue impact of TCJA is to compare (a) actual revenues in FY2018 with (b) predicted revenues in FY2018 assuming Congress had not passed the legislation. In fact, the actual amount of revenue collected in FY2018 was significantly lower than the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)’s projection of FY2018 revenue from January 2017—before the tax cuts were signed. The shortfall is $275 billion, or 7.6 percent of revenues that were expected before the tax cuts took place. Given that the economy grew, unless one can find some other change that caused a large revenue loss, the data imply that TCJA reduced revenues (Figure 1) – substantially.
Originally Posted by WTF
I would love to hear from you and lusty just where all that free money wound up?
Originally Posted by WTF
Please think like the businessman you are instead of a politician. Let's use the corporate tax cut as an example. You as a shareholder are the owner. This isn't far off given you own shares in American companies.
First, about your last point. That's not "free money." Rather, the federal government is only taking 21% of YOUR income, instead of 35%. You and your employees worked hard for that money. How's it free?
The federal government, when it cut the corporate rate, left you with 79% of your before tax income instead of 65%. That's another 14% to invest and expand. You go out and hire more employees, and invest in more working capital and equipment than you would have otherwise. What's the effect on the amount of tax you initially pay? Well, it goes down. It's going to take a while to train people, and you're writing off a a good chunk of your capital investment in the first year through Section 179 deductions and in the 2nd and 3rd years through accelerated depreciation.
But as the effects of that additional investment kick in, you realize more income from your bigger operation. Repeat year after year and achieve the returns I know you're capable of, 15% per year, and your income goes up. At some point maybe you're paying more tax than if the government hadn't "reinvested" more in your business by allowing you to keep and invest more of YOUR money.
Think of this like the government's the mafia. If it drains off too much money from the people it's extorting money from, in the long run it can end up with less. They're not going to thrive and expand. Maybe they'll quit and move or do something else. Please note the relevance of this analogy to Lusty Lad's point about American companies bringing more money back to the USA because of the TCJA. And fewer American companies moving investment and operations out of the USA.
And getting back to employees, it's not going to take as long for the favorable effects of the tax cut to be seen in their pockets. Your business and others are hiring more people, driving down unemployment and driving up wages. In 2019, in fact, one short year after the tax cuts were implemented, unemployment went to 50 year lows and, for the first time since the Clinton administration, real median household wages showed a big jump up. Those employees, with their higher wages, pay more tax btw.
Perhaps it just took longer for the positive effects of the tax cuts on business to manifest in higher government revenues.
I won't say that the TCJA necessarily paid for itself. But I don't know, maybe at least parts of it did. Regardless I'd like to see more money stay in the private sector, and less syphoned off by an inefficient federal government.
The Waco Kid said it better and more succinctly than I did,
"In principle, a tax cut could “pay for itself” if it spurred substantial economic growth. Revenues would rise from the combination of higher wages and hours worked, greater investment returns, and larger corporate profits. Under this scenario, that “dynamic” effect would more than offset the entire “static” revenue loss of the tax cut."
Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid