Plus: SCOTUS dodges a preemptive challenge to wealth tax
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey Good Thursday evening! Itâs too hot out for us to think of anything clever to draw you into the newsletter, but weâve got plenty of fascinating fiscal content to share. So let's get to it. (Reuters) A Trump Win Would Mean Higher Inflation, Recession Risk: Moodyâs
A clean sweep for Donald Trump and Republicans in this fallâs elections would result in higher inflation and weaker economic growth over the next four years relative to a baseline that maintains the status quo, according to economists at Moodyâs Analytics. Exploring the economic implications of the upcoming election, the researchers give a GOP clean sweep scenario â in which Trump wins the White House, the Senate flips to Republican control, and the House remains under Republican majority â a 35% chance of occurring. Under those conditions, Trump is expected to raise tariffs sharply on virtually all imported goods. Higher tariffs would raise costs for businesses and consumers, slowing growth while adding inflationary pressure throughout the economy. The odds of a recession would rise. Trump is also expected to push for restrictions on immigration and efforts to deport millions of undocumented workers already in the U.S. That would tighten conditions in the labor market, raising wages while causing worker shortages in key industries including food production and housing construction. Trumpâs promised corporate tax cuts would add another inflationary factor. Reducing the top corporate tax rate would provide fiscal stimulus to an economy already at full employment. It would also increase the deficit and national debt, putting upward pressure on interest rates. With both prices and wages rising, the Federal Reserve would likely feel pressure to raise its key interest rate, or at least delay cutting it, applying a brake to economic growth while raising the odds of a recession. A Biden win: If Joe Biden holds the White House and Congress remains divided, with Republicans gaining control of the Senate and Democrats gaining control of the House â the scenario the researchers say is most likely, with a 40% probability â the researchers estimate that the economy remains close to the status quo baseline. Under those conditions, lawmakers strike a last-minute deal to raise the debt ceiling and avoid a default in 2025; some of the 2017 tax cuts for individuals are allowed to expire, but those earning less than $400,000 a year maintain them; and Biden is unable to raise the corporate tax rate. The researchers also assume that Democrats win an increase in the Child Tax Credit and an extension of subsidies for Affordable Care Act, while Republicans successfully defend some business tax cuts, including more generous depreciation allowances. Immigration would still be an issue, and Biden takes moderate steps to reduce the number of entries at the southern border, though he is unable pass any significant legislation. Biden deploys targeted tariffs against China, focused on electric vehicles and solar power, and his administration continues to push for cleaner energy. Overall, a second Biden administration helps keep the economy near its potential growth rate, while maintaining the unemployment rate close its current low level of 4%. Inflation continues on its downward path, falling to 2% in the summer of 2025, prompting the Fed to reduce its benchmark rate to 3% by the end of 2026. Other scenarios: The analysts note that other scenarios are possible. They give a clean Democratic sweep a 10% chance, while Trump with a divided Congress gets a 15% chance. To see how those unlikely â but not impossible â eventualities could play out, [read the full Moodyâs analysis](. Supreme Court Rejects a Business-Backed Challenge to 2017 Tax Law
The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld an obscure tax on foreign income imposed under the 2017 tax law, rejecting a challenge by business interests that legal observers warned would have had massive repercussions for the tax code. In a 7-2 decision in the case, Moore v. U.S., the court left in place the 2017 provision that imposed a one-time tax on the undistributed profits of some American investors in American-controlled foreign businesses. The Mandatory Repatriation Tax, as it is called, was meant to address trillions of dollars in profits parked in foreign countries to shield them from U.S. taxes, offsetting other benefits of the new law. It was reportedly expected to raise $340 billion in revenue over 10 years. The provision was challenged by Charles and Kathleen Moore of Redmond, Washington, who said they got hit with a tax bill of nearly $15,000 resulting from their pro-rated share of income generated by a company based in India that they invested in, KisanKraft. Their lawsuit argued that the tax violates the Constitution â though analysts also suggested it was an attempt to preemptively prohibit Congress from introducing a wealth tax. The ruling, written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, holds that the tax does not violate Congressâs constitutional authority. Kavanaugh wrote that the tax the Moores were challenging was similar to others on partnerships and S corporations. He echoed the Biden administrationâs argument that striking down the tax âcould render vast swaths of the Internal Revenue Code unconstitutionalâ and potentially âdeprive the U. S. Government and the American people of trillions in lost tax revenue.â NYU Law Professor David Kamin, a tax and budget expert who served in the Obama and Biden administrations, wrote in a social media [post]( âThe Supreme Court today avoided undermining the income tax and rightly ruled against the Moores and a radical legal theory that could have handed corporations and high-income Americans a giant tax cut that Congress never legislated.â What the court did not address: â[T]he larger significance of the ruling is what it didnât do,â writes Mark Sherman of the [Associated Press](. âThe case attracted outsize attention because some groups allied with the Washington couple who brought the case argued that the challenged provision is similar to a wealth tax, which would apply not to the incomes of the very richest Americans but to their assets, like stock holdings. Such assets now get taxed only when they are sold.â Kavanaughâs ruling made clear that it was only addressing the narrow question before the court and that ânothing in this opinion should be read to authorize any hypothetical congressional effort to tax both an entity and its shareholders or partners on the same undistributed income realized by the entity.â Some analysts say that the courtâs decision, and the details of the justicesâ opinions, cast further doubt on the idea of a wealth tax and could open the door to further legal challenges to tax laws. âKavanaughâs opinion left the issue of realization open and there are now four justices, one shy of a majority, who have declared their opposition to taxes, like a wealth tax, that donât require realization,â Sherman writes. Poll of the Day: Biden Gets a Boost on the Economy
President Joe Biden leads former President Donald Trump 50-48 in a new Fox News [national survey]( of registered voters â the first time Biden has led in that poll since October 2023. Trump led Biden 50-45 in Foxâs March poll, and 49-48 in May. âThe key is that Independents favor Biden by 9 points, a shift from May when they preferred Trump by 2 points,â Foxâs Dana Blanton [writes](. The latest result is within the margin of error, but the survey also offered some other reasons for optimism for Bidenâs team. It found, for example, that voters have increasingly positive views of the economy, with 32% saying it is in good (24%) or excellent (8%) shape â a dismally low total that is nonetheless the highest of Bidenâs presidency. The previous high under Biden was 30%, reached last month. The poll also found that 41% say they approve of Bidenâs handling of the economy, the highest since January 2022, and 37% say they approve of how heâs handling inflation, higher than any point since early 2022. Overall, Biden has a 45% approval rating, the same as Foxâs pollsters found last month and the presidentâs best result since January 2023. More than a third of voters, 34%, say they are satisfied with the way things are going in the country, the highest percentage to say that since December 2021. Forty-four percent of voters say they are optimistic about the U.S. economy, up nine points from a year ago, and 59% say they are getting ahead or holding steady financially, up 5 percentage points since June 2023 â though a majority of voters still say they trust Trump to do a better job on the economy, by a 51-46 margin. Trump blasted the poll in a social media [post]( dismissing it as âTRASH!â The poll of 1,095 registered voters was conducted from June 14 to 17 and the results have a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. --------------------------------------------------------------- [RIP, Donald Sutherland](. Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com.
--------------------------------------------------------------- Fiscal News Roundup - [Supreme Court Upholds Trump-Era Tax on Foreign Earnings, Skirting Disruptive Ruling]( â CBS News
- [Supreme Court Dodges Definitive Answer on Legality of a âWealth Taxâ]( â Roll Call
- [Supreme Court Rejects Bid to Preempt Wealth Tax]( â Politico
- [IRS Says âVast Majorityâ of 1 Million Pandemic-Era Credit Claims Show a Risk of Being Improper]( â Associated Press
- [Firestorm Erupts Over Requiring Women to Sign Up for Military Draft]( â The Hill
- [Mike Penceâs Foundation Launches a $10 Million Election-Year Campaign to Preserve Trump-Era Tax Cuts]( â Associated Press
- [Senate Finance Democrats Look to Raise Revenue for 2025 Tax Cliff]( â Roll Call
- [Fox News Poll: Three-Point Shift in Biden-Trump Matchup Since May]( â Fox News
- [Pittsburgh Passes Bill to Help Its Lone Plumber Fix Water Fountains]( â Washington Post Views and Analysis - [On the National Debt, the U.S. Has a Leadership Deficit, Too]( â Washington Post Editorial Board
- [Trump Has Plans to Fix the Government. There Are Smarter Ideas]( â Bloomberg Editorial Board
- [Five Things to Know About Trumpâs Tariff and Income Tax Proposals]( â Erica York, Tax Foundation
- [Biden Is Giving Red Districts an Inconvenient Gift: Green Jobs]( â Liam Denning at al, Bloomberg
- [Soaring U.S. Debt Is a Spending Problem]( â Wall Street Journal Editorial Board
- [Capital Wonât Love You Back, Mr. President]( â Max Moran, Revolving Door Project
- [How Two States Reveal a Deeper Divide on Insuring Kidsâ Health]( â Daniel Chang and McKenzie Beard, Washington Post Copyright © 2024 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed at our website or through Facebook.
The Fiscal Times, 399 Park Avenue, 14th Floor, New York, NY 10022, United States
Want to change how you receive these emails? [Update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe](