How the Trump administration is making rich people richer and poor people pay more.

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Through the use of Tariffs on imports the Trump administration has effectively adopted a new 20% (average) tax on all imported goods. Which effectively raises the cost of goods for consumers across the US.

The OBBBA made permanent the 2017 Trump tax cuts which primarily benefit the wealthy amongst us.

Now his administration is changing rules and regulations to benefit the wealthiest corporations in avoiding the minimum tax rate.

https://archive.ph/9EGs4
How the Trump Administration Is Giving Even More Tax Breaks to the Wealthy

The Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service are issuing rules that provide hundreds of billions of dollars in tax relief to big companies and the ultrarich.

With little public scrutiny, the Trump administration is handing out hundreds of billions of dollars in tax cuts to some of the country’s most profitable companies and wealthiest investors.

The Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service, through a series of new notices and proposed regulations, are giving breaks to giant private equity firms, crypto companies, foreign real estate investors, insurance providers and a variety of multinational corporations.

The primary target: The administration is rapidly gutting a 2022 law intended to ensure that a sliver of the country’s most profitable corporations pay at least some federal income tax. The provision, the corporate alternative minimum tax, was passed by Democrats and signed into law by President Joseph R. Biden Jr. It sought to stop corporations like Microsoft, Amazon and Johnson & Johnson from being able to report big profits to shareholders yet low tax liabilities to the federal government. It was projected to raise $222 billion over a decade.

But the succession of notices the Treasury and I.R.S. have issued beginning this summer means the tax could bring in a fraction of that.

With its various tax relief provisions, the administration is now effectively adding hundreds of billions of dollars in new breaks for big businesses and investors. The Treasury is empowered to write rules to help the I.R.S. carry out tax laws passed by Congress. But the aggressive actions of the Trump administration raise questions about whether it is exceeding its legal authority.

“Treasury has clearly been enacting unlegislated tax cuts,” said Kyle Pomerleau, a tax economist at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning think tank. “Congress determines tax law. Treasury undermines this constitutional principle when it asserts more authority over the structure of the tax code than Congress provides it.”

The alternative minimum tax isn’t the administration’s only effort to roll back taxes on large businesses and wealthy individuals. Last month, the Treasury and I.R.S. granted new tax relief to foreign investors in U.S. real estate. In August, they withdrew regulations to prevent multinationals from avoiding taxes by claiming duplicate losses in multiple countries at once. And, as The New York Times previously reported, the Treasury and I.R.S. have rolled back a crackdown on an aggressive tax shelter used by big companies, including Occidental Petroleum and AT&T. That amounts to another $100 billion in cuts — and likely far more, according to tax advisers.

Changes like these are not widely publicized by the Treasury, but are closely followed by tax planners for the country’s biggest corporations — who are applauding the new guidelines. In notes to clients, advisers at KPMG celebrated the new “array of choices” available for investors seeking to avoid the corporate alternative minimum tax. They noted that the Treasury’s moves provided “significant flexibility” for clients to trim their bills, allowing them to “cherry-pick” the rules that best suit their needs.


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  • Tiny
  • Yesterday, 09:26 PM

How the Trump administration is making rich people richer and poor people pay more.

How the Trump Administration Is Giving Even More Tax Breaks to the Wealthy Originally Posted by txdot-guy
This is an excellent example of how New York Times news reporting has shifted from the center to the left. From time to time, All Sides has rated the news section far left, although right now they call it left of center. The NYT is playing the class warfare card with the headline, and the article’s not even about the wealthy. It’s about the corporate alternative minimum tax.

Your and their contention that the Big Beautiful Bill primarily benefited the wealthy is debatable. Certainly it helped a segment of the wealthy whose businesses employ lots of people or which depreciate lots of tangible assets, by extending the QBI tax deduction. But in terms of the % by which it “reduced” income taxes paid by individuals, the poor and middle class came out better than upper income earners. I put “reduced” in quotation rates because the bill didn’t actually cut taxes, it just extended some of the 2017 TCJA tax cuts that were scheduled to expire.
txdot-guy's Avatar
This is an excellent example of how New York Times news reporting has shifted from the center to the left. From time to time, All Sides has rated the news section far left, although right now they call it left of center. The NYT is playing the class warfare card with the headline, and the article’s not even about the wealthy. It’s about the corporate alternative minimum tax.

Your and their contention that the Big Beautiful Bill primarily benefited the wealthy is debatable. Certainly it helped a segment of the wealthy whose businesses employ lots of people or which depreciate lots of tangible assets, by extending the QBI tax deduction. But in terms of the % by which it “reduced” income taxes paid by individuals, the poor and middle class came out better than upper income earners. I put “reduced” in quotation rates because the bill didn’t actually cut taxes, it just extended some of the 2017 TCJA tax cuts that were scheduled to expire. Originally Posted by Tiny
The corporate alternative minimum tax was passed for very good reasons. It is meant to keep corporations from using tax loopholes. The Trump administration shouldn’t be allowed to just create rules that ignore the law in this manner.