Trump's Rebate Plan Will Push America Toward a Hyperprogressive Tax Code
The president’s $300 billion tariff rebate plan risks replaying Bush-era giveaways—but on a scale large enough to fuel inflation and deepen the deficit.

President Donald Trump's tariffs are bad. But even if one were opposed to the tariffs on principle, they might be seduced by the revenue they generate and the potential of that revenue to make some progress toward reducing the deficit. The tariffs are expected to collect $300 billion annually—nearly matching the amount collected by the corporate income tax ($350 billion). It's not a small amount of money. Trump has stated that his goal is to eliminate income taxes and replace them with tariff revenue.
Last month, Trump and Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) proposed tariff rebate checks, similar to the stimulus checks that were handed out during the COVID-19 pandemic, in an amount equal to the revenue that is to be collected—or possibly more. Hawley's legislation proposes sending at least $600 to eligible adults and dependent children, and Trump has voiced support for sending money to "people of a certain income level," who are most likely to spend that money quickly rather than save or invest it. This is a massively inflationary impulse, much like what we saw during the pandemic, and it will expand the deficit even more. This is a bad idea layered on top of bad ideas, and it will make the tax code even more progressive by effectively creating a negative income tax for those in the bottom tax brackets while fueling inflation.
We've Tried This Before
We are currently running a budget deficit of close to $2 trillion, which Trump has made practically no effort to reduce by cutting expenses. He pledges instead to cut the deficit by increasing revenue from tariffs but plans to hand out the windfall in the form of rebate checks. Our last experience with a give-back program like this was a quarter-century ago.
The government was running a fairly large budget surplus in FY 2000—totaling over $236 billion—and lawmakers made impassioned arguments about how to spend it: Some wanted new domestic programs, others pressed for tax cuts, while then–Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan urged paying down the debt and retiring Treasury bonds. When George W. Bush became president shortly thereafter, he proposed immediate tax relief in the form of $300 and $600 rebate checks to singles and married couples, respectively, a key piece of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001.
Bush prevailed, and roughly 95 million households received checks. The surplus evaporated, federal spending surged on defense and homeland security following 9/11 later that year, and that was the end of the surplus—forever.
Will It Be Different This Time?
It is possible that the tariff rebate checks will not be inflationary. No one knows all the variables that cause inflation. Milton Friedman famously argued that it was "always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon," but inflation is also a psychological phenomenon—when people believe prices will rise, they often act in ways that make it happen. Trump is playing with fire, especially as he is in search of a Fed chairman who will be amenable to large interest rate cuts. The 2021–22 experience is instructive: a combination of pandemic-era stimulus checks, ultralow interest rates, and supply-chain bottlenecks helped fuel the fastest inflation in four decades, peaking at over 9 percent in mid-2022. We could find ourselves in an environment where Trump successfully creates inflation with the rebate checks and then has a captive Federal Reserve that is powerless to do anything about it.
The Bush rebate checks totaled about $38 billion. Trump's proposal could amount to hundreds of billions. Still, the inflationary effect would depend partly on whether households spend the checks quickly or save them.
The Question of Fairness
One of the criticisms of Bush's rebate checks was that they were unevenly applied and did not go to the people who mainly paid the taxes—they went to everyone, which is a very populist approach. The argument could be made that, by aiming these proposed rebate checks specifically at lower-income households, they will benefit those who shoulder the hidden cost of tariffs, since tariffs disproportionately raise the price of basic consumer goods such as clothing, food, and household items, which make up a larger share of lower-income budgets.
It's possible that one of the ulterior motives of the tariffs is flattening the tax code. This would shift the tax burden to people of all income levels, rather than the current income tax, which burdens half of the population while the other half pays very little or nothing. That is not something that has been articulated by the administration, however, and returning all the collected revenue seems counterproductive.
Trump has also proposed eliminating income taxes entirely for people making less than $200,000 a year, which would result in only the top 5 percent of taxpayers paying any income taxes at all. Trump is trending toward policies that would have only the wealthy pay taxes—an idea shared by the likes of Sens. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.). Fiscal conservatives, however, voted for Trump in droves on his promises to reduce the deficit and lower taxes, and they are having buyer's remorse. We shouldn't have tariffs, and to the extent that we have income taxes at all, they should be flat and fair. Instead, we are headed toward a hyperprogressive tax code, accompanied by growth-killing tariffs.
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These rebates should be paid in ca$h using only three dollar bills.
Bitcoin certificates that will pay on demand to the holder
.0000001 Bitcoin.
You, as a wonderful journalist, do know we have a similar example in Alaska with the energy rebates there right? Did they end up as you predict?
It's possible that one of the ulterior motives of the tariffs is flattening the tax code. This would shift the tax burden to people of all income levels, rather than the current income tax, which burdens half of the population while the other half pays very little or nothing. That is not something that has been articulated by the administration, however, and returning all the collected revenue seems counterproductive.
The horror.
https://tenor.com/view/apocalypsenow-horror-gif-4763006
https://mol.im/a/15003847
Anyone know who this is? Lamestream media won’t cover it.
Bushpig, what happened to your original account? Did you lose the password?
Yes, do tell what happened to your original SPB account. The world wants to know.
I'm not clicking your links, pedo.
This is a fucktarded idea.
Use the money to start paying off the debt (or just regular budget items). And continue to work on cutting spending.
^ This
Yeah, it's horrible.
Unfortunately, the Republicans in Congress have absolutely no interest in cutting spending. I'm not sure if they've even voted on the DOGE cuts.
What made you think Trump ever wanted to cut spending ? Just look at what he's actually done. Doge was just a means of getting rid of departments and programs he personally doesn't like ... cutting spending was a red herring.
Rachel watchers are the dumbest...
BBB had cuts.
2 recission bills have passed.
300k federal workers seeking to leave.
Meanwhile democrats are obstructing at every opportunity.
Liberal activist judges are obstructing at every opportunity.
The current budget was signed by Biden, will Otto Penn.
There are limits as to what can be cut in the face if obstruction and reconciliation.
God damn you are dumb.
It's not dumb but evil...ok, maybe both, probably both.
Interesting, a thread disagreeing with the idea then ripping congressional republicans about spending and the troll still have to change the topic to Orange Man Bad.
Hey libertybel, what do you think about Trump ordering troops removed from Syria in his first term?
^EXACTLY +1000000000000.
As long as we are dealing in supposition and hypotheticals, has the Department of Education (sic) been eliminated yet?
The government was running a fairly large budget surplus in FY 2000—totaling over $236 billion—and lawmakers made impassioned arguments about how to spend it
A few of our accounting-ignorant Peanuts still deny that a surplus occurred in 1999-2000. Because, you know, Team Red hacks can't accept reality.
Back then, your original account hadn’t been banned yet. What happened to it?
If this ever stops being enjoyable, I'll let you know. But it won't.
You know how we know there was no actual surplus?
The debt went up every year, even with the cuts that Newt was able to get Clinton to sign.
I’ve explained the increased debt to you and dumbass Jesse multiple times.
Social Security SURPLUSSES by law must be used to purchase Treasuries to earn interest.
Do you even know how bonds work? Jesse is too stupid to know.
What happened to your original account, Pluggo? Did you manage to get it banned?
So... There wasn't a surplus of non-SS accounting.
MAGA Champion Who Said Trump Would Fight Child Predators Is Arrested on Charges of Being a Child Predator
Jack Silvers
Wed, July 30, 2025 at 4:03 PM EDT
....
A fervent Trump supporter who said that he was casting his 2024 vote to fight child trafficking is now being charged with 10 counts of possessing child pornography.
....
Scott Soucek of Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, was arrested on July 24 and accused of accessing hundreds of child pornography images through a file-sharing system.
....
Soucek isn’t just a Trump booster himself: he’s also the husband of a leading Republican Party operative in the state.
Any of you Peanuts know this dirtbag?
Maybe he attends the same NAMBLA meetings that you do?
Any of you Peanuts know this dirtbag?
No, but you probably do through your dark web chats.
Trump has said very little about rebate checks. I saw speculation and Josh Hawley's proposal, but not much from Trump. Bessent said congress is considering it, but it will be used to pay down the debt first.
Right. I'm getting the impression the "Trump's" rebate plan is nothing but lefty-propaganda. Hawley on the other hand is stupid enough to pitch such a RINO idea.
Taxes could be charged, rather than coercively, instead like an admission fee.
If you have to pay a tax before negotiating business with a federal agency, the you might be supporting the daily operations with a tenner that gets you admission for the entire day.
If t'were true that wealthy persons need federal services moreso and more often than poor people, then their small sacrifice would be in greater proportion and at greater frequency than when a poor person needs to use a federal service.
OK hear me out on this one.
What if this whole Tarrif/Rebate shenanigan is a backdoor version of the old Republican Fair Tax Proposal?
As you may recall the "Fair Tax" was a national sales tax, that came with a flat bundled rebate check sent to every American every quarter. The idea being that the rebate checks would be how you give lower income folks a tax break, while also not having to rely on the IRS to figure out people's tax burden based on income. It was a fairly reasonable plan, and most republicans were for it, but it was of course impossible to get passed.
With the vast majority of items Americans are buying coming from overseas, these tarrifs act very much as a consumption tax, and the rebates could serve the same function as proposed Fair Tax rebates. The tarrifs add in the ability to be used as trade leverage and have the consumption tax targetted on foriegn goods only.
The more the tarrifs and strategy around them is settling into place, the more I am thinking this is just a clever and subtle way to try to transition to the "Fair Tax" dream
Donnie doesn’t know what the Fair Tax is.
What happened to your original account?
Abuse Patterns & Treatment
A pedophile will not stop on his own, and will not turn himself in, because he does not take responsibility for his behavior and denies that he’s doing anything harmful. He will abuse until he’s caught.
Unfortunately Reason enabled you when they did not involve law enforcement.
https://mentalhealthcenter.com/profile-of-a-pedophile/
It's not 9-D chess. It's Trump being an idiot.
And somehow, he's still smarter than you.
That would only make sense if they had pushed for even more income tax cuts.
Edit: instead of just extending the 2017 ones.
Hey guess what! Slavery is now "fake news"!
https://www.thedailybeast.com/gop-candidate-shares-clip-denying-atlantic-slave-trade/
A Republican candidate in Georgia has shared a clip that describes the Atlantic Slave Trade as “fake history.”
Team Red has been very successful changing people's perception of reality to fit its narrative. This is just more of the same.
And what does this have to do with rebates, Jeffy?
A person messing up history in a dumb way. Not unlike trans people messing up history claiming to be a sex they aren’t.
She is so well endorsed by the GOP there are six other republicans in the same race.
If she makes it to the office of VP and then selected to be the potus candidate against the consent of the party’s primary voters like some other idiot who also happens to be a WoC, then it could be said that the party supported this.
Not gonna lie, I expected it to be an old white dude, not an attractive young woman retweeting a Waka post.
Where do you get the idea that taxing some and paying others can be inflationary, if it doesn't affect the amount of money in circulation or its velocity in commerce?
That’s the old Austrian way to think of inflation.
Wealth Distribution ... from Republicans? Seriously?
F anyone who supports this leftarded BS.
If there is no-one left in D.C. who supports an actual USA maybe it is time for another Revolutionary War ... again.