Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in Maryland would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $1,802,700 in 2018. They would receive 69.7 percent of the tax cuts that go to Maryland’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $123,720 in 2018 alone.
Trump-GOP Tax Law
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in Maryland with 69.7 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in Massachusetts with 63.2 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in Massachusetts would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $3,010,300 in 2018. They would receive 63.2 percent of the tax cuts that go to Massachusetts’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $215,670 in 2018 alone.
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in New Mexico with 42 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in New Mexico would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $1,264,600 in 2018. They would receive 42 percent of the tax cuts that go to New Mexico’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $73,070 in 2018 alone.
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in Kentucky with 42.8 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in Kentucky would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $1,313,400 in 2018. They would receive 42.8 percent of the tax cuts that go to Kentucky’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $68,550 in 2018 alone.
-
report July 20, 2017 Trump’s $4.8 Trillion Tax Proposals Would Not Benefit All States or Taxpayers Equally
The broadly outlined tax proposals released by the Trump administration would not benefit all taxpayers equally and they would not benefit all states equally either. Several states would receive a share of the total resulting tax cuts that is less than their share of the U.S. population. Of the dozen states receiving the least by this measure, seven are in the South. The others are New Mexico, Oregon, Maine, Idaho and Hawaii.
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in California with 64.7 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in California would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $2,746,600 in 2018. They would receive 64.7 percent of the tax cuts that go to California’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $149,710 in 2018 alone.
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in Idaho with 48 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in Idaho would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $1,418,700 in 2018. They would receive 48 percent of the tax cuts that go to Idaho’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $90,670 in 2018 alone.
-
July 20, 2017 Trump Tax Proposals Would Provide Richest One Percent in Illinois with 56.1 Percent of the State’s Tax Cuts
Earlier this year, the Trump administration released some broadly outlined proposals to overhaul the federal tax code. Households in Illinois would not benefit equally from these proposals. The richest one percent of the state’s taxpayers are projected to make an average income of $2,726,200 in 2018. They would receive 56.1 percent of the tax cuts that go to Illinois’s residents and would enjoy an average cut of $134,270 in 2018 alone.
-
blog June 29, 2017 CBO Just Shot Down Trump’s Economic Forecast
Last month, the Trump Administration released a budget proposal that relies on unrealistic projections of economic growth to create the illusion that it will balance the budget by 2027. By making the federal budget outlook appear more favorable than it actually is, the administration is seeking to bolster its case for enacting a multi-trillion-dollar tax cut. Fortunately, Congress has its own independent forecaster that just chimed in with a more rational assessment of the economy.
-
report June 29, 2017 Trump Budget Uses Unrealistic Economic Forecast to Tee Up Tax Cuts
The Trump Administration recently released its proposed budget for Fiscal Year 2018. The administration claims that its proposals would reduce the deficit in nearly every year over the next decade before eventually achieving a balanced budget in 2027, but the assumptions it uses to reach this conclusion are deeply flawed. This report explains these flaws and their consequences for the debate over major federal tax changes.
-
blog June 2, 2017 What a Populist Budget Proposal Really Looks Like
A truly populist budget would seek to ensure that middle- and low-income families have the resources that they need to get ahead, that the wealthy and corporations are paying their fair share in taxes, and that our country is making the public investments we need to ensure full employment and improve productivity over the long term. The Congressional Progressive Caucus’s (CPC) 2018 budget proposal would make real progress on all of these fronts.
-
blog May 30, 2017 Avocado Toast, iPhones, Billionairesplaining and the Trump Budget
A couple weeks ago, a billionaire set the Internet ablaze when on 60 Minutes Australia he chided millennials to stop buying avocado toast and fancy coffee if they wanted to… -
blog May 26, 2017 Besides Eviscerating the Safety Net, Trump Budget Would Put States in a Fiscal Bind
There has been considerable discussion about the human impact of the Trump budget’s draconian cuts to what remains of the social safety net. A long-standing conservative talking point in response to such criticism is that states can pick up the tab when federal dollars disappear. But at a time when many states are facing budget shortfalls and the effect of federal tax reform is yet to be determined, it is outlandish to suggest that states are flush with cash to make up for federal spending reductions.
-
blog May 23, 2017 Trump Budget Plan Would Eliminate Child Tax Credits for Working Families Due to Parents’ Immigration Status
As ITEP has detailed, undocumented immigrants are taxpayers, contributing close to $12 billion a year in state and local taxes while also paying federal payroll, income, and excise taxes. In spite of these facts, Mick Mulvaney, President Trump’s budget director, has spread erroneous information to validate the administration’s cruel proposal to strip a proven anti-poverty benefit from undocumented immigrants and their children.
-
news release May 23, 2017 Trump’s Budget Proposal and Tax Plan Are the Antithesis of Populism
A month ago, President Trump released a tax sketch that likely would redistribute wealth upward, and today he has poured salt on the wound with a proposed budget that would gut safety net programs and cut funding for other services that help move people out of poverty. Yet the PR refrain is the same Orwellian prattle we’ve been hearing for years: water isn’t wet, tax cuts for the rich will eventually trickle down to the rest of us, and balancing the federal budget must always rely on cutting programs that benefit ordinary people.
-
blog May 5, 2017 Key Resources for Digging into the Trump and GOP Tax Reform Agenda
President Donald Trump’s tax sketch released in late April is the starting point for federal tax reform discussions. For now, the sketch includes too few details to properly analyze its… -
blog April 27, 2017 President Trump’s Corporate Tax Outline: At Least He Didn’t Use a Napkin
The most complimentary thing that can be said about the corporate tax changes outlined by President Trump earlier this week is that they weren’t scribbled on a napkin. Unlike supply-side… -
blog April 25, 2017 Does a 15 Percent Corporate Tax Rate Sound Low? For Dozens of Major Corporations, Maybe Not
President Donald Trump has promised to release new details Wednesday on what he says could be “the biggest tax cut we’ve ever had.” While much is unclear about the shape…