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GOP senators push Trump admin for a new tax break for the wealthy

The GOP's tax cuts for the wealthy haven't worked out as planned, so 21 Republican senators want a new one - that they think can be implemented without Congress
Republican U.S. presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz attends a Penn. campaign kickoff event held on N.Y. presidential primary night at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Penn. on April 19, 2016. (Photo by Charles Mostoller/Reuters)
Republican U.S. presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz attends a Penn. campaign kickoff event held on N.Y. presidential primary night at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Penn. on April 19, 2016.

Republican policymakers already approved a massive package of tax breaks a year and a half ago, and by any fair measure, the GOP tax plan hasn't worked out as planned.

It's against this backdrop that several Republican senators are demanding another tax cut to benefit the wealthy -- though this one would come from the Trump administration, not from Congress. The L.A. Times' Michael Hiltzik explained yesterday that 21 GOP senators, led by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), sent a joint letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin "demanding that Mnuchin deliver a new tax cut via executive fiat."

The GOP complains that the capital gains tax isn't indexed to inflation. As a result, the argument goes, taxpayers including "everyday Americans" are charged taxes on gains that are due purely to inflation, not to the real appreciation of their stocks or bonds."This treatment punishes taxpayers for the mere existence of inflation and is inherently unfair," the senators write.The supposed unfairness could be rectified if Mnuchin were to redefine the concept of "cost basis" -- that is, the price at which an asset was purchased -- to include inflation.

That may sound a little complicated, so let's unpack this a bit.

The New York Times reported one year ago today that the Trump administration was "considering" a unilateral tax cut, that would almost exclusively benefit the wealthy, by using its regulatory powers "to allow Americans to account for inflation in determining capital gains tax liabilities."

The article added, "The Treasury Department could change the definition of 'cost' for calculating capital gains, allowing taxpayers to adjust the initial value of an asset, such as a home or a share of stock, for inflation when it sells."

The Washington Post's Matt O'Brien recently characterized this as "the most useless and regressive tax cut ever."

As we discussed a year ago, the question of indexing capital gains taxes to inflation has been around for a while, though the conversation has clearly progressed to new levels of late. Mother Jones’ Kevin Drum summarized the debate nicely:

Let’s say that ten years ago you bought $1,000 in shares of DrumCo stock. Naturally it’s a well-managed company and today those shares are worth $1,300. You sell them for a $300 profit, and pay a nice, low 20 percent capital gains tax of $60.But then you start to think. What about inflation? That $1,000 in 2008 is the equivalent of $1,150 today. Your real profit is only $150, and $60 represents a capital gains tax of 40 percent. What a rip off! Part of your “profit” is really just keeping up with inflation. Why do you have to pay any taxes on that?

Under current tax law, inflation is irrelevant. Lawmakers have generally concluded that it’s too tricky to change the law, so they’ve instead created a low capital-gains tax rate to make investors happy.

A sizable group of Republican officials apparently believes that’s not quite good enough. They like the idea of tying a low capital-gains rate with an inflation adjustment, in the process creating a new massive tax break.

And what’s wrong with that? A few things, actually. First and foremost, the policy is profoundly regressive, delivering nearly all of the benefits to the very wealthy. The very rich don’t need yet another tax break, and polling suggests such a move would be wildly unpopular.

Second, it’s very likely that the Trump administration can’t legally make major changes to our federal system of taxation without congressional approval. If Mnuchin and his team -- at the urging of 21 GOP senators -- seriously pursued such an approach, the litigation would be immediate, and there’s no reason to assume courts would approve of the gambit.

And third, I seem to recall Republicans screaming bloody murder any time the Obama administration tried to use its executive authority to pursue its priorities without Congress. I long ago lost count of how many times GOP leaders condemned the Democratic president as a dictatorial tyrant, running a “lawless presidency,” for even considering policymaking outside the legislative process.

After seeing the letter from Cruz & Co., it appears many Republicans are applying a different standard now.

Postscript: If GOP leaders are suddenly concerned about inflation indexes, can we have a related conversation about the minimum wage?