Californias Have Learned Nothing
Oregon's Department of Revenue Stole $20K From a California Woman
Democrats Suddenly Forgot About the Separation of Church and State
Secretary of War Hegseth Is Slamming Mark Kelly Again. Here's Why.
After Redistricting Win, Tennessee State Rep. Deborah Moody Needs Protection From the Tole...
Socialism Is the Ideology of Children
Another Minnesota Non-Profit Is in the Public Eye for Channeling Funds for Luxury...
The Minnesota Lynx Reminded Us Why No One Watches the WNBA
Why Dems Ignore Rules
Scott Jennings Says Democrats Only Have One Standard Now: Are You Radical Enough
AOC Says the American Revolution Was About Fighting Against the Billionaires
Netanyahu Reveals the Massive Change He Wants to Make in Israel’s Relationship With...
The Spencer Pratt Effect: One Candidate Backs Out of a Debate, the Other...
The Secretary of War Just Announced Another Investigation Into AZ Senator Mark Kelly
Here Is Spencer Pratt's Plan for the City's Rampant Crime If He's Elected...
OPINION

It's Official: Trump's Tax Cuts Paid for Themselves

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
It's Official: Trump's Tax Cuts Paid for Themselves
AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

How many times have you heard President Joe Biden or Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT) berate the Trump tax cuts as "a giveaway to the rich"?

Advertisement

Biden and congressional Democrats now want to let expire major planks of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, former President Donald Trump's signature domestic achievement, particularly the incentives for American businesses to invest more here at home.

We now have incontrovertible evidence that after five years since they took effect, the Trump tax rate cuts of 2017 raised revenues over this time period. For full disclosure, I should note that I worked with fellow economists Larry Kudlow, Arthur Laffer and Kevin Hassett together on that plan, which went into effect on Jan. 1, 2018.

The latest Congressional Budget Office report released earlier this month calculated that the federal government collected $4.9 trillion of federal revenue last year. This was up -- ready for this? -- almost $1.5 trillion since 2017, the year before the tax cuts became law.

In other words, revenues were up 40% in five years. The evidence through the first three years of the tax cut finds that the share of taxes paid by the wealthiest 1% rose as well. So much for this being a tax giveaway for the rich.

I compared these numbers with the estimates of what the Trump tax cuts were expected to "cost." Instead of an expected $1 trillion revenue "loss," the tax receipts over this period were almost precisely what they would have been if we didn't cut taxes at all. And remember, that estimate in 2017 never anticipated the two-year hit to the economy from COVID-19 lockdowns -- which depleted the Treasury.

Advertisement

Related:

DONALD TRUMP

In other words, there was a giant Laffer Curve effect from Trump's tax cut. We got higher growth and higher tax payments with lower tax rates.

This shouldn't be a giant surprise. The same thing happened when Democratic President John F. Kennedy cut tax rates in the 1960s and when Republican President Ronald Reagan cut tax rates in the 1980s. Lower rates and more revenues.

None of this seems to matter to the White House or congressional Democrats. They want to monomaniacally repeal a tax cut that worked. This would be like firing a coach who wins every game.

One of the most important and successful features of the Trump tax plan was reducing the tax rate on American businesses from 35% -- the highest in the world -- to 25% while closing special interest loopholes. This brought businesses and jobs back to these shores and helped fuel the Trump economic boom.

An obvious question is, why are we running a $1.4 trillion deficit if we have an all-time high in tax payments?

Because under Biden, federal spending has exploded to more than $6 trillion. Washington doesn't have a revenue problem. It has a problem of runaway spending. It's almost as if Congress is pleading for help: Stop us before we spend again.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement