Trump Says US May Cut Income Tax Completely in Next Couple of Years Due to Tariff Income
The president said the tariffs imposed on foreign nations have generated substantial revenue.
President Donald Trump said on Nov. 27 that the United States could eliminate income taxes over the next couple of years due to revenue generated from tariffs.
“We’re taking in hundreds of billions of dollars like we’ve never done before. And some of that’s going to go back in a form of a sort of dividend to our people, but much of it’s going to go toward reducing debt,” he said.
“Over the next couple of years, I think we‘ll substantially be cutting and maybe cutting out completely, but we’ll be cutting income tax, could be almost completely cutting it, because the money we’re taking in is going to be so large.”
The surge in tariff revenues resulted from Trump’s trade policies, which established a 10 percent baseline levy on most imports and a series of reciprocal duties applied to trading partners, with some nations facing duties as high as 40 percent.
The group estimates that the tariffs will add roughly $256 billion to federal receipts next year and increase the average household’s costs by about $2,200. The group cautions that its figures are “highly uncertain,” as they reflect complex stacking rules and do not include the impact of foreign countermeasures or broader macroeconomic impacts on the U.S. economy.
“That heavy inventory purchase is now, however, wearing thin, and soon Tariffs will be paid on everything they apply to, without avoidance, and the amounts payable to the USA will SKYROCKET, over and above the already historic levels of dollars received. These payments will be RECORD SETTING, and put our Nation on a new and unprecedented course.”
Post a Comment