The Trump administration on Wednesday released a broad outline of a plan to make major changes to the tax code. Many important details were left for Congress to hash out, including how to pay for the tax cuts and which deductions to eliminate. Some key elements of the proposal:
(Mostly) Lower Rates for Individuals

While the rate applied to the lowest income bracket would increase, the plan says that typical families in the existing 10 percent bracket would be better off because of a larger child tax credit and an increase in the standard deduction. The full effects of the plan on different groups has not yet been analyzed by experts.
The plan would also eliminate the alternative minimum tax, which has critics on the left and the right, and the estate tax on inherited wealth greater than $5.49 million, a longtime Republican target.
(Mostly) Increase the Standard Deduction

Filers can choose the standard deduction or itemized deductions, but not both. Most filers — 70 percent — currently choose the standard deduction because it is higher than what they qualify for in itemized deductions.

To help pay for the increase, the plan would eliminate other deductions, with the exception of the mortgage interest and charitable contribution deductions.
Eliminate the State and Local Tax Deduction

But the political divide is not so straight-forward. A recent Tax Policy Center analysis found that of the 20 congressional districts with the highest percentage of returns claiming the deduction, nine have Republican representatives.
Create a New Tax Rate For‘Pass-Through’ Businesses
>The plan would create a new 25 percent tax rate for “pass-through” businesses — sole proprietorships, partnerships and S corporations that currently pay taxes at the individual rate of their owners. Pass-throughs now make up about 95 percent of businesses in the country and the bulk of corporate tax revenue for the government.
Most pass-throughs are small sole proprietorships currently paying less than a 25 percent marginal rate. But a few are quite large — 1.7 percent of pass-through businesses generate more than 40 percent of all pass-through income and are taxed at the top 39.6 percent rate. The plan would be a windfall for these high-earning pass-throughs

Lower the Corporate Rate While Eliminating Some Tax Breaks
The plan would lower the corporate tax rate to 20 percent from 35 percent and eliminate some business deductions and credits. The proposal says that the deduction for domestic production would no longer be necessary because of low rates, and it “envisions repeal of other business credits,” with the exception of those for research and development and low-income housing.
A recent analysis by the Tax Foundation found that eliminating all corporate tax expenditures that do not change the structure of the tax code would pay to lower the rate to 28.5 percent from 35 percent, far short of the 20 percent rate called for in the plan. Because the Trump plan calls for retaining some expenditures, Congress will have to find even more savings to pay for the tax cut.

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