A Short-Sighted Tax Plan That Undercuts America

Published by the Natural Resources Defense Fund

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Any tax plan that defers yet again the urgently needed infrastructure, resiliency building and job-producing revitalization our country needs is a defeat for millions of Americans. On that score, the congressional Republican leaders’ so-called “tax reform,” so far, is a failure.

The House and Senate tax plans are a blow to our health, our well-being, our ability to prosper as a nation, and most of all they make our children pay for any grab-it-now benefit to a small percentage of earners. And, the next generation won’t just pay in money, but in lost opportunity and diminished ability to thrive and prosper.

How do we know?

The cuts proposed would severely impair public-private partnerships in building roads, bridges, transportation lines, affordable housing, hospitals, airports and schools – projects sorely needed for the public good. There would be little or no incentive for taking those projects in new directions to include more green infrastructure and clean energy, thus contributing to emissions and doing nothing to protect against climate effects such as harsh heat, coastal floods, increased asthma and early death. And, of course, good-bye solar, wind and other energy credits and their clean energy benefits.

Not surprisingly, the most vulnerable Americans—who suffer disproportionately from pollution and health-related climate effects—would be most at risk.

Housing

For example, under threat are Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (Housing Credits) – the nation’s most successful tool for producing and preserving affordable rental housing, which in conjunction with private activity bonds have financed more than 3 million apartments since 1986. This has provided  homes for some 7 million low-income families, seniors, veterans and people with disabilities.

So, what exactly is at stake? The tax bill approved by the House, “the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” (HR1), protects the Housing Credit, BUT eliminates private activity bonds, which are critical for half of all Housing Credit transactions. 

Private activity bonds trigger use of what are called “4 percent Housing Credits.” In other words, without the bonds, the badly needed affordable housing these credits finance would not be built.  And in fact, the value of 4 percent Housing Credits allocated nationally has more than doubled since 2010. As a result, the 4 percent Credits are responsible for about 50 percent of all Housing Credit production.

The Senate tax bill protects Housing Credits and private activity bonds.  And for an explainer of the housing and community development policy differences between the bills, check out this great piece. With this much in play, small wonder that local officials are increasingly concerned about this wrongheaded bill.

However—and sorry, tax financing has a lot of moving parts but it’s really important—both the House and Senate bills would impede Housing Credit production by not explicitly shielding them from the negative impact of the 20 percent corporate tax rate on the Housing Credit.  Thankfully, there is a fix available in the Senate that would offset the effect of a lower corporate rate on affordable housing production. Senators just need to add it to the bill.

The ACTION Campaign has created state and district fact sheets to help illustrate the impact of the Housing Credit in every congressional district, including the number of affordable apartments created or preserved, the jobs supported and other benefits to local economies. And to help you understand how important private activity bonds and 4% Credits are for multifamily affordable rental housing, the National Housing Conference (NHC) created state-specific facts sheets now available on its website.

A slowdown in housing production is already happening. And, it’s not just low-income renters who will be affected. The national housing affordability crisis will be exacerbated, with more people fighting for housing near job centers and more being driven farther from opportunity by high prices, creating sprawl and straining transportation arteries and city resources.

The money for transportation, for example, will have to come from somewhere and that could mean more tolls and local taxes to pay for the loss of federal investment.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure was touted by President Trump early on as a major area of focus, but there is little to show for that claim except a smoke-and-mirrors plan that would funnel very few federal resources to especially hurting communities. With possible incentives under a new tax plan, our hopes were raised again, but there are no proposals to take simple and logical steps such as putting the gas tax in line with inflation to fund clean transportation and other projects, incentivizing commitments from corporations that benefit from tax cuts to keep fair-wage jobs in the United States or other commonsense approaches.

Dismantling state and local tax deductions, as proposed, would burden the taxpayer as the added cost of financing local infrastructure and housing projects is passed on to middle class families.

As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities puts it, when the tax cuts cause the deficit to rise, Congress will likely call for cutting federal programs after the fact, reducing important infrastructure investments in highways, transit, drinking water and wastewater treatment systems, and other long overdue needs. Already, nearly one-fourth of all Americans are getting drinking water from untested or contaminated water systems. 

Devaluing infrastructure built for the public good devalues  America. As we recently stated, the quality of infrastructure determines whether societies thrive or fail. And it’s a key indicator of our progress and stature as a nation.

As we’ve laid out in a set of principles, infrastructure built with an emphasis on people and the environment can not only improve transportation, create better access to power and energy, increase economic mobility, and bring us into the 21st century but also make our communities more resilient, support fair-wage jobs, improve health, and help address income disparity, systemic racial segregation, and poverty.

The American Society of Civil Engineers has given U.S. infrastructure an overall grade of D+ and called for $2 trillion in investments. Proposed cuts in the House-passed plan would mean a $1.5 trillion revenue loss overall.

What will that mean for our children and their ability to breathe clean air and drink pure water, live in places of opportunity and thrive? 

About the Authors

Senior Policy Adviser, Urban Solutions

SPARCC Policy, Capacity, and Systems Change Director & Senior Adviser, Urban Solutions

Read the full article at: https://www.nrdc.org/experts/deron-lovaas/short-sighted-tax-plan-undercuts-america

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