#特朗普税改

Trump's tax reform, centered on 'domestic tax cuts and foreign tax increases', aims to stimulate domestic investment and employment by significantly reducing corporate taxes (from 35% to between 15% and 21%) and simplifying individual tax brackets (from seven to three, with the highest tax rate decreased from 39.6% to 35%). However, this move may exacerbate the fiscal deficit, with estimates suggesting that tax cuts could cause federal debt to rise to 111% of GDP over the next decade. The tax reform is linked to tariff policies, such as imposing tariffs of 10%-60% on imported goods, creating a strategy of 'external pressure to drive internal growth', compelling manufacturing to return but raising inflation and provoking retaliation from multiple countries. Additionally, the elimination of state tax deductions and other provisions impacts middle-class individuals and the Chinese community in high-tax states (like California and New York), worsening wealth disparity. On an international level, Trump's withdrawal from global tax reform negotiations and opposition to a minimum corporate tax aims to preserve U.S. tax sovereignty, leading to a more complex international tax landscape.