old marine wrote:
I assume you have links to prove your opinions.
It is collection of many articles. All can be found but a lengthy search needed to get all the data..
But I have a few more if you wish..
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the fiscal gap could total as much as $2.7 trillion over the next 10 years. Republicans counter that added economic growth of 0.4% per year would offset the cost, but every reputable forecast puts the likely incremental growth at a negligible amount.
54% of the GOP tax cuts will go to people making MORE than $75k, 31% will go to corporations, and 16% will go to people making LESS than $75k, per the Joint Committee on Taxation.
Only 4.3% of workers will receive a one-time bonus or wage increase tied to the GOP tax cuts, while businesses received nine times more in cuts than what they passed on to their workers, per Americans for Tax Fairness.
More than half of Americans and U.S. voters say they have not noticed an increase in their paychecks since the GOP tax law passed, per CNBC's All America Economic Survey and Politico-Morning Consult polls.
More than half the benefit from the GOP tax law's pass-through deduction will go to people who make more than $1 million a year, per the Joint Committee on Taxation.
80% of the economic growth generated by the GOP tax cuts will eventually go abroad and benefit foreigners, per the Congressional Budget Office.
Gasoline and packaged goods inflation will wipe out most of the tax bill benefit for the bottom half of Americans, per the Wall Street Journal.
Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (R): "There's no evidence whatsoever that the money's been massively poured back into the American worker."
Retiring Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker (R): Tax cuts could be "one of the worst votes I've made."
Former White House Chief Economic Advisor Gary Cohn: Trump is "Dumb as s***"