THE YEAR-END TAX BILL: A BIG WIN FOR CORPORATIONS AND A LITTLE WIN FOR WORKING AMERICANS

Because of the gridlock in Congress, so few bills pass that those that have to pass get laden with special interest provisions and riders like ornaments on a Christmas tree. The recent year-end spending bill (2,009 pages long) and tax legislation (233 pages long) are the latest two examples. There were literally thousands of riders attached to these two massive and complicated bills. Many special interest provisions are slipped in by powerful legislators, typically on behalf of corporate lobbyists, when there is little time for other legislators (let alone the public) to scrutinize them. Nonetheless, these provisions can produce significant, windfall benefits for the targeted beneficiaries. Not surprisingly, the executives of the corporations that stand to reap the benefits are often large campaign contributors. [1]

The tax legislation Congress passed on December 18 was a $686 billion 10-year package. In it, Congress made permanent two recent expansions of tax credits that support low-income, working families: the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Tax Credit (CTC). Over the next 10 years, this will put $118 billion in the pockets of low-income working Americans. This will keep 16 million people from falling into poverty or deeper into poverty and it will help the economy by putting money in the pockets of people who will spend it at local businesses.

Congress also renewed the American Opportunity Tax Credit. It provides a tax credit of up to $2,500 per year for the costs of college. This will give a helping hand to millions of families struggling with the costs of higher education.

Overall, nearly 40% of the tax breaks in this legislation – approximately $250 billion – benefit working Americans who are overwhelmingly low- and middle-income. Typically, when the year-end tax cut package is passed low- and middle-income Americans have gotten just 20% of the tax breaks. So this year, with advocacy by many progressive leaders and activists, the benefits for working families were double what they usually are. [2]

This is the difference that political activism can make. Thank you to all of you who contributed your time, efforts, and voices to this fight.

Nonetheless, corporations got more than $400 billion in tax breaks. For example, heavy lobbying by Wall Street financial institutions made permanent a supposedly temporary, major tax loophole that makes it easier to stash profits offshore and avoid taxation here at home. This $78 billion (over 10 years) tax loophole has helped General Electric go five straight years without paying any federal income tax, and instead getting billions in refunds. Another offshore tax loophole was extended for five years at a cost of $8 billion. A special tax provision on the depreciation of equipment, intended as a temporary measure to fight the 2008 recession, was extended for another six years costing $28 billion in lost corporate tax revenue. Corporate lobbyists helped draft the language of at least some of these tax giveaways.

The hypocrisy of the supposed deficit fighters in Congress was on full display. None of the $400 billion in corporate tax breaks was paid for; their cost was simply added to deficit. Not one loophole was closed or tax subsidy eliminated to pay for this largesse. Yet when a provision to extend benefits for 9/11 first responders came up, the supposed deficit hawks insisted that it had to be paid for with spending cuts and new revenue!

My next post will cover highlights of the year-end spending bill.

[1]       Moyers, B., 12/22/15, “The Plutocrats Are Winning. Don’t Let Them!” Common Dreams (http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/12/22/plutocrats-are-winning-dont-let-them)

[2]       Clemente, F., 12/22/15, “Families Advance With Recent Tax Bill, But Corporations Got a Lot More,” The Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/frank-clemente/families-advance-with-rec_b_8861986.html)

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