The accounting maneuver that could make the cost of extending Trump’s tax cuts look like zero

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A controversial budget maneuver is gaining steam on Capitol Hill that could help make Donald Trump’s first-term tax cuts permanent while also making room for additional tax break pledges he made on the campaign trail.

But it would push up the national debt by trillions of additional dollars beyond what’s already planned.

The idea is to essentially make the cost of extending the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act free, at least for accounting purposes. That can be done by assessing changes using a so-called current policy baseline, a bit of Washington arcana with trillions in potential consequences.

But no matter how you count it, extending Trump’s 2017 cuts will add somewhere in the neighborhood of $4 trillion to America’s debt, and fiscal hawks are strenuously objecting, calling it “a massive budget gimmick.”

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, Donald Trump, and JD Vance speak in December at the Army-Navy football game. (Getty Images) · Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images

The tactic congressional leaders are considering is to count this year’s tax rate as “current policy” and therefore make the cost of extending the rate — at least for the purposes of assessing the bill — zero.

The political appeal is obvious in that such a move could potentially help alleviate a giant math problem facing lawmakers looking to cut taxes as deeply as possible.

But in a recent episode of Yahoo Finance’s Capitol Gains podcast, the architect of those expiring 2017 cuts made clear that either approach would come with trade-offs.

Kevin Brady, former chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, called the current policy approach “a curious way of Washington thinking” but also pointed out it’s clearly a way to more easily make the tax cuts permanent — a key Trump priority.

The political reality is also that there is going to be a need to keep fiscal hawks on board, with Brady predicting a serious deficit reduction number will eventually be needed no matter how it’s counted — comparing the dynamic to “two rock climbers tethered together.”

He said that serious deficit reduction will ultimately be the deciding factor in how big a tax bill is ultimately possible. It’s a balance that Brady’s successor atop the tax-writing committee, Rep. Jason Smith of Missouri, also appears to be balancing.

The maneuver is clearly under increasing consideration, with House Speaker Mike Johnson appearing to warm to the idea this week after House Republicans had previously pushed a different counting approach.

“The policy makes a lot of sense to me,” Johnson told reporters after a meeting at the White House where Trump aides and Senate leaders pushed the tactic.

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