Donald Trump is betting that Americans crave trillions of dollars in tax cuts and that growth will be so fantastic that it’s not worth worrying about budget deficits.In short, he’s hoping that most economic analyses of his ideas are dead wrong.Vice President Kamala Harris believes that big corporations and the ultra-wealthy should pay more in taxes and wants to use those revenues to help spur the construction of 3 million homes and offer tax breaks for parents.She’s hoping to deliver on the types of policies that President Joe Biden has been unable to secure in a lasting way.The two presidential nominees are using the week before their debate to sharpen their economic messages about who could do more for the middle class. Harris will discuss her policy plans Wednesday in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, while Trump will address the Economic Club of New York on Thursday.The economy has historically been a dominant issue in presidential elections. In an August survey by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs, Trump did narrowly better on the economy with 45% saying he would handle it better and 38% saying Harris would.There are high stakes in this showdown because the winner of November’s election could rewrite much of the federal tax code next year, when parts of Trump’s 2017 tax cuts are set to expire.A look at the candidates’ proposals:DIFFERENT PITCHES TO THE MIDDLE-CLASSTrump and Harris have different ways of trying to help the middle class.The former Republican president sees tax cuts for businesses and the wealthy as essential for promoting more investment, with those who’ve previously advised him saying average growth would top 3%. Mind you, overall economic growth never hit 3% a year when Trump was president. But between 2018 and 2019, the median household income jumped by $5,220 to an inflation-adjusted $78,250, according to the Census Bureau.What I tell people all the time: The Trump policies were designed to lift middle-class wages, re-onshore and re-industrialize, said Joseph LaVorgna, an economist who worked in the Trump White House. The intention is to get wages higher.By contrast, Harris wants to upgrade the middle-class promise of home ownership and ease the high costs of parenthood. She also wants tax breaks for entrepreneurs. It’s a message meant to show that Harris can address the problem of prices as people are still recovering from inflation spiking to a four-decade high in 2022.First-time homebuyers could get $25,000 in down payment assistance that would be coupled with broader policies to encourage the construction of 3 million additional homes in four years. New parents could get a $6,000 tax credit and an expanded child tax credit.When working- and middle-class Americans have the opportunity to earn more, to build a business, to buy a home, to climb the economic ladder, it strengthens our economy and helps us grow,” said Brian Nelson, a Harris adviser.NO TAXES ON TIPS, SOCIAL SECURITYTrump has proposed no taxes on tips paid to workers or Social Security income. Harris has embraced the idea of not taxing workers’ tips.As Ernie Tedeschi at the Yale Budget Lab noted, excluding tips from taxes is unlikely to provide much of an economic boost even if some individuals feel better off. He noted that just 2.5% of workers receive tips and that many don’t earn enough money to owe income taxes to the federal government.Trump would also exclude Social Security payments from taxation, which could cost $1.2 trillion over 10 years. The risk is those taxes help fund Social Security. Without those revenues, the program would be unable to pay full benefits starting in 2033, or two years earlier than currently forecast, according to an analysis by Brendan Duke, senior director of economic policy at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank.TARIFFSAs much as Trump talks about tax cuts, he would also want to engage in a massive tax hike by charging higher tariffs on imports in order to grow jobs.How much would the tariff be? No one really knows. Trump has proposed a broad tariff of 10%, but at an August event in North Carolina suggested it could be as high as 20%. Against Chinese products, he would like a tax of somewhere between 60% to 100%.The Republican insists his tariffs wouldn’t jack up inflation, but the whole goal of the tax is to make imports more expensive so that more manufacturing occurs domestically. The Harris campaign says the middle class would face a higher tax burden, with the 20% tariff applied broadly costing a typical household $4,000 annually.The Trump campaign did not answer questions about how the tariffs would work. If the goal is to bring jobs back from overseas, the tariffs would presumably be phased in over time so that manufacturing jobs could return to the U.S. But if the goal is to raise revenues, then they would be implemented immediately.TRUMP’S NOT AFRAID OF DEBTIt’s not clear that Trump could pay for his ambitious tax cuts.He wants to extend the expiring provisions of his 2017 tax overhaul. Hes floated the idea of chopping the 21% corporate tax rate to 15%, in addition to no taxes on tips and Social Security income. The estimated price is close to $6 trillion, but it could be higher. And the Congressional Budget Office already estimates $22 trillion in deficits over the next decade without the tax overhaul being extended.Growth would not appear to cover the price tag. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget surveyed economic analyses and found that Trump extending his tax cuts would have roughly no impact on overall growth over 10 years because of the additional debt.The overall agenda doesnt seem to be all that pro-growth, said Marc Goldwein, senior vice president and senior policy director for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.HARRIS IS MORE CAUTIOUS WITH DEFICITSAccording to the Harris campaign, all her spending plans would be funded. Officials with her campaign have suggested that her sources of revenue would largely mirror Biden’s 2025 budget proposal.Still, the Penn Wharton Budget Model estimates that her policies would add $2.3 trillion in spending. It forecasts that her plan to increase the corporate tax rate to 28% would produce $1.1 trillion in tax revenues. But the group did not include other proposals such as taxing the unrealized income gains of people worth $100 million or more, as there are not enough details to produce an accurate number. Nor did it include other revenue increases.The Penn Wharton Budget Model suggests that the Harris plans would hurt growth more than Trump’s would through 2034, though it excluded his proposed tariffs from the analysis.The real difference of the plan is how tax burdens would change starting in 2026.Under Trump’s plans, someone in the top 0.1% of earners would after taxes get on average $376,910 more in income. The poorest 20% would get just $320 more.Harris’ policies would reduce the average incomes of the top 0.1% by $167,225. But the bottom 20% get $2,355 more in income and benefits.Bigger picture: both Harris and Trump are causing the debt path to rise even faster than the fast pace under current law, said Kent Smetters, the faculty director of the Penn Wharton Budget Model.
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Police say University of Wisconsin-Whitewater gymnast Kara Welsh, a 21-year-old student at the school, was killed Friday and the 23-year-old suspect was arrested.
On This Monday in the Heart of the Riverbend… we are starting the day off with Abigail Parker, and Nourished Revival! Abigail will fill us in on the latest, and upcoming opportunities for us to help ourselves! At 10:10, we are talking with Jason at Grid Solar It’s time for another one of our scheduled segments with the trusted solar company in the Metro East! Jason will bring us his insights into the solar industry, and how solar can work for us! Then at 10:35, we are talking to Dan Herkert, Commission Chair of the Alton Amphitheater Commission! Now until August 9th, you can get 15 % of Scotty McCreery tickets when you buy four or more! Dan will fill us in on that, plus the opening act for August 9th, and we will touch on Jazz and Wine Fest!
On This Thursday in the Heart of the Riverbend, we are starting things off with Adam Marburger and Alton Family Martial Arts and Fitness! Adam will join us to fill us in on the amazing work being put in by the team, and the success they are seeing! We will learn ways of which we can join, and all of the other opportunities that await us!
[video:6880]BELLEVILLE – For Mike Lanham, the dream to become a blacksmith started with “Sesame Street.”He remembers a “Sesame Street” short in which a blacksmith uses a silo ring to make carriage bolts for a sled. At age 5, Lanham was fascinated. It wasn’t until he was in college at SIUE that he was finally able to take a summer blacksmithing class, and that interest he developed at age 5 turned into a passion. Today, Lanham is the owner of Giant Dwarf Forge, and his 13-year-old daughter Caroline is following in his footsteps.“The idea that you could take something thrown away and make something brand new out of it just sparked something in my imagination, and it never let go,” he said. Like a lot of young boys, Lanham said, his first blacksmith mission was to make himself a knife. He joined the Illinois Valley Blacksmith Association and the Blacksmiths Association of Missouri, then started attending more demonstrations and trying it for himself. His first knife took him six hours. Now, he makes knives in 45 minutes.He remembers one project that took months to perfect. A few years into his blacksmithing journey, he watched a demonstrator make a pair of tongs. Lanham went home and made six tongs but couldn’t get it right. When he came back a year later to watch the demonstration again, he realized that three strokes of the hammer made all the difference.This patience is an important part of blacksmithing. Caroline said that most issues are “a two-second fix” if you know what you’re doing, but it takes a lot of hard work to get it right. She said this “trial and error” is her favorite part.Through Giant Dwarf Forge, Lanham and Caroline go to a lot of trade shows like the Home Builders & Remodelers Metro East Association Home Expo. They also sell utensils, knives, keychains and more on the official Giant Dwarf Forge Facebook page. The father-and-daughter duo love working together and sharing their passion for blacksmithing with the rest of the community.“I tell everybody imagination and patience are your only two limitations,” Lanham added. “It’s just a lot of thinking about it and processing it and then just going home and trying to reproduce it and doing it again and again.”For more information about the Home Builders & Remodelers Metro East Association, visit hbrmea.org.
On This Monday in the Heart of the Riverbend… we are starting the day off with Luis, and getting the latest from the St. Louis Sports Scene. We will talk the Cards playing pretty decent ball, and St. Louis City’s continued fall from grace. Then at 10:35, we are talking with Mary Cordes with another edition of Beyond the Shelves With Hayner Library! On the first and last Monday of each month we explore the community resource (and staple), and get the latest on events coming down the pipeline, programing, and more!
Mike Lynch’s friend and former colleague has detailed his relationship with the late tech entrepreneur and what the ‘Bayesian’ yacht was like following its sinking off the coast of Sicily on Aug. 19 that claimed the lives of Lynch and six others.
With credit card debt reaching a record high, consumers looking to save a few bucks should reacquaint themselves with the virtues of cold, hard cash.
Briley Borden is a brand new teacher with fourth grade Math & Science. She’s starting her career at Weeden Elementary School in Florence.
The Big Ten kicked off its season with four new teams, five new coaches and 13 schools featuring new starting quarterbacks.
Metro’s TAP-to-Exit pilot program at its North Hollywood B Line station expanded to all 10 end-of-line stations Tuesday, beginning in Santa Monica.
Patriots great Tom Brady shared his thoughts on New England’s handling of rookie quarterback Drake Maye.