https://www.thebalance.com/trump-s-tax-plan-how-it-affects-you-4113968
Trump's tax reform plan would help the wealthy more than the middle class. Once all the deductions and exemptions are factored in, the poorest fifth of the population receives a tax break of 0.5 percent to 0.2 percent. They were better off under Trump's Five-Part Plan, where they received a 0.6 percent boost.
The tax break improves for each income level. The top 1 percent would get an 8.5 percent break. That's better for them than Trump's Five-Part plan, which gave a 6.5 percent break. This favoritism to the wealthy is why Trump's tax plan increases the debt so much. The most affluent Americans contribute the lion's share to total tax revenues.
More than a third of taxpayers already have incomes that fall below their standard deduction and personal exemptions. They wouldn't benefit at all from the Framework plan, according to New York University law professor Lily Batchelder.
The Framework hurts parents of school-age children because they lose the personal exemption for each child. That means almost 10 million parents will see their taxes increase.
The Framework doesn't mention the head of household filing status. But Trump's earlier plan eliminated it. That would hurt single-parent families.
Will Trump's Tax Cuts Work?
The administration is relying on supply-side economics. That theory advocates giving tax cuts to businesses so they can create jobs. It worked during the Reagan administration because the highest tax rate was 70 percent. According to the Laffer Curve, that's in the prohibitive range. That's when taxes are high enough that cuts can boost the economy out of debt. But the
2017 tax rates are half what they were in the 1980s. For that reason, trickle-down economics no longer works.
No matter how low taxes are, corporations won't add jobs to build products until they see demand for them. That's why it makes economic sense to give the most significant tax cuts to the poor and middle class. They are more likely to spend every dollar they get. The wealthy use tax cuts to save or invest. It helps the stock market but doesn't drive demand. Once demand is there, then businesses create jobs to meet it. That's the best way for tax cuts to create jobs.