Tax cuts in Trump’s budget bill would create winners and losers in Minnesota

WASHINGTON Who are the winners and losers in President Donald Trump s tax cut plan If Congress fails to pass Trump s big beautiful bill majority but not all taxpayers will face an increase in their federal taxes But several analyses indicate the state s wealthier residents will be impacted the majority of and those with medium and modest incomes would see little or no change And the Congressional Budget Office CBO stated the entire bill would boost the incomes of the wealthiest of Americans while lowering the incomes of the lowest The benefits are much much higher for higher-income people than for lower-income people revealed Joseph Rosenberg senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Program Center The U S House is expected to try to pass the tax cut package Wednesday in a megabill that would cut Medicaid food stamps and other domestic programs and still balloon the deficit by at least trillion according to the CBO The tax cut package was perhaps Trump s greatest legislative initiative in his first term in office Its cuts to corporate taxes won t expire they are locked into law But the cuts to individual taxpayers would expire at the end of the year unless Congress acts Yet the act faces obstacles from both conservatives who oppose the tax cut s bloating of the federal deficit and moderate Republicans from blue states that insist there be a higher cap on the deductibility of state and local taxes Still approval of the tax package would bring changes to individuals and couples when they fill out their s for and so would the rule s defeat According to the latest Tax Guidelines Center analysis the biggest winners in the bill would be Minnesota taxpayers whose adjusted gross income AGI is or more and have had their taxes reduced by more than The Internal Revenue Utility says at least Minnesota households shared AGI s of or more in But majority Minnesota taxpayers more than million released lower adjusted gross incomes that year and benefitted less from Trump s tax cuts Households with moderate incomes from to have been saving an average of about since Trump s tax cuts were first implemented in Americans with less income would save less than that and certain not at all The Tax Protocol Center s analysis included new provisions Trump promised voters during his campaign for the White House including an increase of the child tax credit to The tax package would also -Increase the standard deduction by for individuals for heads of households and for married couples Offer greater part Americans who are and older an extra deduction of per filer whether they take the standard deduction or itemize their returns Deposit for children born over the next four years in a MAGA account that is invested in the stock sector Offer a temporary tax deduction for people in occupations that traditionally and customarily received tips such as restaurant servers Allow filers to deduct interest on car loans though those vehicles have to be made in the United States Trump also kept another campaign promise as the bill would provide a new tax exemption for overtime pay While a great number of would gain from these changes to the tax code a large number of provisions would expire or deductions and credits be reduced in or in the limited years afterwards The tax package would also create losers Chief among them are the children of undocumented immigrants Because there would be a new requirement that both parents have a valid Social Shield number millions of immigrant families would not receive a child tax credit The Center for Migration Studies estimates that million children across the nation and about in Minnesota who are citizens or legal permanent residents would lose eligibility for the child tax credit And immigrants authorized to live in the United States but who are not citizens or green card holders would be barred from receiving tax credits covering the cost of Affordable Care Act strength insurance premiums Americans who purchase certain electric cars would also lose their tax credit as well as credits for solar electric panels and power efficient windows appliances and other efforts to make homes more power efficient No Democrat is expected to vote for Trump s bill if it comes to the House floor Wednesday They have decried it as a massive giveaway to the rich at the expense of the poorest Americans who would suffer a loss of biological care and other social services My Republican colleagues will say these tax cuts are for everyone announced Rep Ilhan Omar D-Minn at a latest House Budget Committee hearing on the bill But she declared they favored the wealthy and they are tiny scraps for everyone else and I mean tiny Rosenberg rebutted Trump s claim that the tax package would boost the U S business sector But he revealed the measure would have little effect on economic development going forward Still the bill would keep federal taxes lower for the majority of Americans If Congress does nothing taxes will increase Rosenberg reported A salty issue Taxpayers in high-income high tax blue states like Minnesota were major losers in Trump s tax plan because it capped the deductibility of state and local taxes SALT at for individuals and for married couples The cap helped pay for the bill s tax cuts function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a figures datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a statistics datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a evidence datawrapper-height t px r style height d Those taxpayers may still be losers but not as much To placate a number of GOP lawmakers in swing districts in Democratic states House Speaker Mike Johnson R-La has offered to lift the SALT cap to for individuals with or less in income But that did not satisfy a group of New York lawmakers who say they won t vote for the bill unless the cap is raised much higher or removed entirely Related D C Memo Tax cuts a salty issue for Trump s big beautiful bill We need a little more SALT on the table to get to yes revealed Rep Nick LaLota R-N Y after GOP lawmakers met with Trump on Tuesday over the massive budget package Late Tuesday Johnson agreed to lift the SALT cap to for individuals with or less in income which seemed to bring particular of the rebellious members of the GOP SALT caucus along According to the IRS in the year before the SALT cap was implemented Minnesota taxpayers deducted the cost of state and local income taxes In after the cap was imposed that number fell to function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a records datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a records datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a facts datawrapper-height t px r style height d So even with the cap specific Minnesota taxpayers take the deduction A MinnPost analysis of IRS content shows that the largest proportion of taxpayers in the state that took the SALT deduction lived in the suburban Twin Cities rd congressional district which is represented by Democratic Rep Kelly Morrison while the smallest proportion lived in Republican Rep Pete Stauber s th congressional district If and when the massive budget bill is approved by the House it will head to the Senate which has been appealed by the White House to finish work on the provision by July The post Tax cuts in Trump s budget bill would create winners and losers in Minnesota appeared first on MinnPost