Good point and i get what you're saying/writing, But From a purely economic standpoint, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 has been a mixed bag.
Let's start with jobs. Has the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act created millions of new jobs, ? Nope. In the four years before the GOP tax law, the economy added an average of 213,000 jobs each month, that's not something i'm pulling out my ass, that's
data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the nearly two years after it passed, job creation declined by an average of 11,000 per month.
The White House promised that the tax cuts would result in an https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/documents/Tax%20Reform%20and%20Wages.pdfage increase annually of $4,000 per household. not even close. Again, In the two years since the law passed, wage growth, after accounting for inflation, rose only slightly, from 1% to just under 1.4% per year for nonsupervisory workers . That amounts to less than $400 for a full-time worker.
We also have been told, that tax cuts for the rich are good for the overall economy. In the four years before the law passed, real GDP grew by an annual average rate of about 2.4%, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the nearly two years since, the GDP growth rate has inched only slightly higher to an annual average of 2.5%.
The claim that a huge tax cut for the wealthy and corporations would trickle down to everyone else was based on an outdated and discredited set of ideas for how the economy works. In that old framework, the way to produce a better economy is to get out of the way of job creators and let the free market do the rest. A tax cut for corporations, then, should have reduced the cost of capital and induced them to invest more, which ultimately is supposed to create jobs and push up wages.
But even that first step never happened. In the last two years, the growth rate of private direct investment has declined. In the four years before the law passed, private direct investment grew by about 3.3% annually, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. In the two years after the law was enacted, that rate went down to 2.5%.
The idea that tax cuts aimed at corporations and the rich would help all of us is flawed. Because that's not how the economy works in real life. Corporations don't make investment decisions based on tax giveaways.