Why Ryan’s ‘Border Adjustment’ Import Tax Is So Controversial
Why Ryan’s ‘Border Adjustment’ Import Tax Is So Controversial · The Fiscal Times

The centerpiece of House Speaker Paul Ryan’s major corporate tax reform – a 20 percent “border adjustment” tax on all imported goods to help offset the more than $1.2 trillion cost of across the board tax cuts for corporations and individuals—just took another hit over the weekend.

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said on Sunday during an appearance on the CBS News’ Face the Nation that the House plan won’t garner even 10 votes in the Senate, where the Republicans currently hold a 52 to 48 seat advantage over the Democrats.

Related: The $1 Trillion Border Tax Could Sink Paul Ryan’s Fiscal Plan

“The Congress is stumbling,” Graham said. “Republicans in the Congress – we’re all tied up in knots. The House is talking about a tax plan that won’t get 10 votes in the Senate.” Graham echoed the assessment of Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-TX) last week that the border adjustment tax idea was on “life support” in the Senate.

If Graham and Cornyn are correct, then the growing resistance to the House plan among lawmakers and corporate executives could greatly complicate – or even sidetrack – the efforts by President Trump and GOP leaders to push through the first major reforms of the federal tax code since 1986. That includes repealing taxes associated with Obamacare as well lowering corporate and individual taxes.

However, without the border adjustment tax provision, which is estimated to raise more than $1.2 trillion over the coming decade, the amount that will be needed to offset the massive tax cuts would raise the deficit even further.

Ryan and Ways and Means Committee Chair Kevin Brady (R-TX) wrote last year, in first announcing their plan, “From the perspective of America’s place in the global economy, the new tax system will focus on investment in America and investment for America.”

Related: Dueling Trump and GOP Tax Plans Would Cause Much Larger Deficits

“The focus on business cash flow, which is a move toward a consumption-based approach to taxation, will allow the United States to adopt, for the first time in history, the same destination-based approach to taxation that has long been used by our trading partners.,” they added. “This will end the self-imposed unilateral penalty for exports and subsidy for imports that are fundamental flaws in the current U.S. tax system.”

But the border adjustment idea is proving to be a tough sell. And even Trump, who is eager to push through a major tax cut this year, has said that Ryan’s plan may be “too complicated” to sell to Congress and the public.

So what exactly is Ryan’s plan, what would it do, and why is it so controversial? Here is a layman’s guide to the plan.