Economists say Trump’s economic plan is an impossible blend
NEW YORK — Donald Trump has attached a price tag to an economic vision promising what many economists say is impossible: lower taxes, a dramatic expansion in some federal programs and a slimmer government running a smaller deficit.
In a speech Thursday to the Economic Club of New York, Trump said that his plan — a mix of tax cuts, regulation elimination and new spending — would reduce the nation’s tax burden by $4.4 trillion over 10 years and create 25 million new jobs.
Trump and his advisers say that would lead to booming economic growth of as much as 4 per cent a year, which would make up for most of that lost tax revenue along with an infusion of new money from trade, energy and regulatory reforms.
The rest would come from almost $1 trillion in spending cuts made over the next decade, which Trump would accomplish by cutting one penny from every dollar from certain segments of the government each year.

