Analysis: Clinton, Trump tax plans are “mirror images”
SANTA FE, N.M. — Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump’s tax plans are “mirror images” of one another, with the Democrat proposing steep tax hikes on the wealthy while the Republican candidate proposes even deeper reductions in the taxes paid by America’s richest people, according to an analysis released Tuesday.
The Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center found that the top 0.1 per cent of taxpayers would pay $800,000 more in taxes on average under Clinton’s plan while Trump’s plan, their taxes would decline by more than $1 million. It found that Trump’s proposed cuts would cost $6.2 trillion over 10 years while Clinton’s would raise $1.4 trillion in new revenue over that time period — money the Democrat proposes using for new government programs.
“Trump has a very, very large tax cut that’s primarily focused on high income individuals. Clinton has a significant tax increase” for those people, said Len Burman, a former Treasury official under President Bill Clinton who is director of the centre, a joint project between two nonpartisan Washington, DC think tanks. “In almost every meaningful respect these plans are mirror images.”
The analysis does not account for the possible economic effects of the tax plans, but the authors nonetheless predicted that Trump’s plan would cut into the economy by by running up large deficits that cause interest rates to soar. The Trump campaign said the analysis is worthless because it lacks critical calculations.
