Trump Proposes Musk-Led Efficiency Commission, Lower Tax for Firms That Produce in US

Trump unveiled a series of economic policies in a speech in New York as the campaign seeks to contrast the platform with Harris’s ahead of next week’s debate.

Former President Donald Trump unveiled plans for a 15 percent tax rate for companies that produce goods in the United States, a commission to conduct an audit of the federal government, and the clawback of unspent funds authorized under the Inflation Reduction Act.

He added that billionaire Elon Musk, who proposed the idea of the commission, agreed to lead the efficiency panel.

In remarks to the Economic Club in New York on Sept. 5, Trump outlined new economic policies as the campaign looks to contrast his platform against Vice President Kamala Harris’s ahead of the debate next week.

Other provisions of Trump’s plan include increasing domestic energy production, ending subsidies for so-called green energy projects, decreasing federal regulations, attacking government waste and mismanagement, and increasing tariffs to spur domestic manufacturing.

Trump’s speech was made a day after Harris unveiled a proposal to give small business tax breaks and increase the top capital gains tax rate to 28 percent, breaking from President Joe Biden’s budget proposal that she had previously endorsed.

Economic issues are the greatest concern for most voters according to an Aug. 13 poll by the Economist/YouGov.

Some 97 percent of Americans named jobs and the economy as either “important” or “very important” in their thinking. In the same poll, 63 percent said the country is on the wrong track.

Both candidates released their plans just ahead of the first, and so far, only, planned presidential debate on Sept. 10. Both aim to convince voters that they can be trusted to bring back jobs, make housing more affordable, and reduce the cost of gasoline and groceries.

Domestic Production

Trump also highlighted tax incentives aimed at increasing U.S. manufacturing capacity. The keystone of the plan is a reduction in the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 15 percent exclusively for companies that make their products in the United States.

“My message is simple,” Trump said. “Make your product here in America, and only in America. We are not going to be taken advantage of anymore.”

Trump also promised expanded tax credits for research and development, a 100 percent bonus depreciation, and expensing for new manufacturing investments.

The former president suggested that he would raise tariffs on imports to spur domestic production.

He credited his tariff policy for “opening up a higher and better destiny” for Americans. “We have to take care of our own nation and her industries first,” he added.

During his administration, Trump levied tariffs on billions worth of Chinese imports over Beijing’s unfair trade practices. The Biden administration has retained and broadened these tariffs.

At campaign rallies, Trump has repeatedly said he would raise China tariffs to 60 percent and apply at least 10 percent tariffs on goods imported from other countries.

Commission, Government Spending

The former president announced that he would create a government efficiency commission at Musk’s suggestion. The commission would be tasked to conduct a financial and performance audit of the federal government and make recommendations for reform, he said.

The Republican presidential nominee confirmed Musk has agreed to lead the task force.

“I look forward to serving America if the opportunity arises,” Musk said in a post on social media platform X. “No pay, no title, no recognition is needed.”

Musk’s possible leading of the panel raises conflict of interest concerns given the companies he runs receive government subsidies and are impacted by federal regulations.

This commission would be part of Trump’s broader regulatory overhaul efforts, he said, that would “liberate our economy from crippling regulations.”

He also pledged to eliminate a minimum of 10 current regulations for every new regulation imposed. This would build on Trump’s January 2017 executive order that called for slashing two regulations for every new one. The former president cited the Biden administration’s rule to expand electric vehicles as a regulation for the chopping board.

Between the fiscal years 2017 and 2019, the Trump administration reduced close to eight regulations for every “new, significant regulation,” according to a July 2020 Council of Economic Advisers report.

Trump’s plan would also claw back unspent funding from the $891 billion authorized over 10 years by the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), a wide-ranging law authorizing spending on energy and climate change projects, subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, and expansion of the Internal Revenue Service.

Republicans have sought to curtail that spending since the bill’s passage in 2022. A considerable portion of the funds remain unspent. For example, the IRS has spent $5.7 billion of its $57.8 billion in IRA funds, according to the U.S. Treasury Inspector General.

The Biden administration considers the IRA to be one of its signature accomplishments, and Harris has said she was proud to make the tie-breaking vote for the bill in the Senate.

“In the two years since President Biden signed it into law, this landmark bill has already delivered for American families,” she wrote on Aug. 16, adding that it had lowered medication costs for millions of seniors.

Other pillars of Trump’s wide-ranging economic plan include making his tax cuts permanent and embracing future industries, like cryptocurrency.

Crypto has become a key plank in the GOP nominee’s economic plans, vowing to establish a national bitcoin strategic reserve.

Marc Goldwein, senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said that Trump’s plans to end energy-related regulations like the electric vehicle mandate or clawing back unspent funds from the Inflation Reduction Act could result in hundreds of billions of dollars in revenue increases.

However, slashing the corporate tax rate to 15 percent for domestic-producing companies, he said, would similarly lower revenue by hundreds of billions, while incentivizing American manufacturing.

“Because you’re … giving with one hand through that greater incentive to invest, and you’re taking with the other to the extent that the debt is … laying down in the economy, pushing up interest rates,” Goldwein told The Epoch Times.

“I would still expect those proposals to probably be modestly pro-growth, but I wouldn’t expect them to be hugely pro-growth.”

US Dollar

On applying economic sanctions on countries, especially Russia, Trump said he would apply sanctions forcefully against those who deserve them, but later lift them strategically to preserve the dollar’s strength.

“I was a user of sanctions, but I’d put them on and take them off as quickly as possible, because ultimately it kills your dollar … it kills everything the dollar represents,” he said.

Losing the U.S. dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency, he said, would be “equivalent of losing a war.”

Trump also said he would impose tariffs on countries that don’t honor the dollar as the world currency.

Harris’s Economic Plan

Meanwhile, Harris has unveiled key elements of her economic agenda in recent weeks.

Her economic plan includes a Child Tax Credit proposal, a federal ban on price gouging, $25,000 subsidies for first-time buyer housing, and a plan to build 3 million affordable homes by the end of her first term. She also hopes to expand on President Joe Biden’s efforts to bring down key prescription drug costs.

And on Sept. 4, she proposed a tenfold increase in the tax deduction for startup costs to $50,000 from $5,000. Tax experts at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget say Harris’s plans would add $1.7 trillion to the deficit over the next decade before interest. However, she also proposed to increase the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from 21 percent, which would roughly generate $1 trillion over the next decade, according to estimates.
Harris also announced a 28 percent tax on capital gains for those earning more than $1 million annually, below the 44.6 percent proposed in Biden’s 2025 budget, but higher than the current 20 percent rate.

 Arjun Singh and Terri Wu contributed to this report.

Original News Source Link – Epoch Times

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