Sunday, August 19, 2018
WSJ: Tax Revenues Are Up 1%, Despite Trump Tax Cuts
Perhaps
you’ve read that the federal budget deficit is rising again, and that’s
true. But what you probably haven’t heard is that the main reason is
spending, not falling revenue from tax cuts.
The
Congressional Budget Office released its budget summary for July this
week, and the deficit for the first 10 months of fiscal 2018 reached
$682 billion, up $116 billion from a year earlier. Federal spending
increased by $143 billion for all the usual reasons—especially Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security.
But
revenues were higher as well—up $26 billion. Corporate income taxes
were down substantially as expected in the wake of the tax reform that
cut the corporate rate and added 100% expensing. But individual income
taxes increased by $104 billion, or 7.9%, despite the cut in individual
tax rates.
How
could that be? CBO says one reason is that withholding from paychecks
increased by $32 billion, which “largely reflects increases in wages and
salaries.” In other words, a faster-growing economy employed more
people who made more money.
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