Giving to the Ultra-Rich Through Tax Breaks

Talking politics here and probably rightfully so. Tax relief for the wealthy and kicking people off of Medicaid to fund those breaks will not go over big. It appears there is plans to cut Medicare also. Both cuts will be for funding tax breaks for wealthy in income. The highest 10% will average an ~ $14,000 tax break.

CBO analyzed the combined effects of the tax policies and spending reductions and found that working families will experience a net loss in household resources, while the ultra-rich will get richer. Briefly:

  • Families already struggling to make ends meet lose the most. Households in the lowest income decile, making $24,000 a year or less, lose about $1,200 every year, mostly due to deep cuts to Medicaid and food assistance. That amounts to over 3 percent of their total income, a devastating hit for people who can afford it the least.
  • Everyone in the bottom twenty percent of the income distribution, or those making less than $43,000 a year, will see a net decline in household resources.
  • Middle-class families get next to nothing. For those in the 5th and 6th decile, or the middle of the distribution, they will experience a resource gain of only 0.8 to 1 percent. That is barely enough to keep up with rising costs due to President Trump’s reckless actions.
  • The ultra-rich get a windfall. Families making over $700,000 a year will see a $13,600 boost, almost entirely from tax cuts. That figure does not even count the massive estate tax giveaways for the ultra-rich.

Tr__p’s Big Ugly Law gives the ultra-rich a massive tax cut 

  • An average household making less than $15,000 a year will see a tax increase of over 9 percent in 2027. By 2033, when many temporary provisions in the tax portion of the law expire, this group will experience a 56 percent tax increase.
  • While people earning $40,000 a year will see an average tax decrease of only $393, worth a few weeks of groceries, people making over $1 million a year will see their taxes go down by $97,000 in 2027.  

Tr__p’s Big Ugly Law sets a new precedent for wealth transfers to the ultra-rich 

  • The TCJA gave people making over $500,000 a year an average tax cut of $35,000 the first year after enactment. By comparison, the Big Ugly Law will give people making over $500,000 a tax cut of $47,000 in the first year alone.
  • The TCJA transferred a total of $36.9 billion dollars to people making over $1 million a year in just the first year after the bill was enacted. The new bill will more than double that number, giving people making over $1 million a year $114 billion in tax cuts for 2027 alone.
  • While the TCJA worsened inequality, it gave very modest tax cuts (around $20 dollars a year) to the lowest income earners. The Big Ugly Law will ask the lowest earners to pay higher taxes every year.
  • Because this bill is coupled with spending cuts intentionally targeting working Americans. On net, the bill is even crueler and more unequal than TCJA.