Leroy wrote on Feb 9
th, 2025 at 4:04pm:
Frank wrote on Feb 9
th, 2025 at 2:45pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Feb 9
th, 2025 at 2:21pm:
Carl D wrote on Feb 9
th, 2025 at 1:47pm:
So... with all of this "efficiency" and billions of dollars (allegedly) being saved left, right and centre - is anyone prepared to start taking bets on how long it will take for the average working class American (especially Trump's supporters) to start asking "where's our tax cuts?"
Because I'm pretty sure they won't be seeing any.
But, I'm almost certain the rich will get some cuts.
And then... how much longer will it take for those "average working class Americans" to realise they've been duped by Trump and Musk?
https://i.imgur.com/C4T12Hd.png Appendix: MethodologyThe bulk of this analysis was conducted using the ITEP Microsimulation Tax Model. The unconventional nature of many of the policy proposals crafted by former President Trump, however, required bringing in new data and techniques previously outside the model’s scope. Each of the major components of the tax modeling underlying this report is discussed below.
Ah. Guess work, then.
As you were.
ITEP is a biased dem think tank, will be interesting to see if they have been getting USAID.
Amy Hanauer, ITEP’s Executive Director, provides vision and leadership to bring accurate research and data to tax
policy conversations. ITEP’s research shows that more
progressive and adequate tax codes will do more to bring about
racial, economic and climate justice. When wealthy people and corporations pay their fair share, the country raises more revenue for the essential things we need and does so in a way that is more
conducive to equity and growth.Amy joined ITEP in 2020, bringing nearly 30 years of experience creating economic policy that advances
social justice. Amy is also the Executive Director of Citizens for
Tax Justice (CTJ), ITEP’s 501(c)(4) partner organization. As Director, Amy raises resources, guides strategy, and works with the board and staff to make ITEP and CTJ a critical part of the
policy conversation around a stronger tax code.
Say, BINGO! BINGO! BINGO! BINGO!
But wait!
Tax justice is critical to racial justice and ITEP is proud to bring our in-depth analysis and strategic insight to this work. Tax codes may not explicitly be race-based, but decisions about who and what is taxed, and at what levels, have racialized impacts. The history of race-based injustices is long and its impact on wealth and well-being today is profound. While tax policy alone cannot reverse centuries of systemic racial oppression, building fair and adequate tax codes is essential to addressing longstanding inadequacies in public services and forging a path towards a more equitable future.
Are they open about their bias?
Mission
ITEP is a non-profit, non-partisan tax policy organization.