Sorry, servers. The presidential candidates obviously want your vote, but don’t expect them to deliver on what is a dubious, if trendy, campaign promise.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump got the idea to exempt tips from income tax after a “very smart waitress” in Nevada supposedly complained to him about the taxes she had to pay on tips. “No tax on tips” now ranks No. 6 on Trump’s list of policy priorities.
Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris positions herself as the anti-Trump — except when it comes to tips. She recently echoed Trump’s call to eliminate taxes on tips while also in Nevada.
Hmm, what is it about Nevada?
Oh, right. Nevada happens to be one of seven swing states up for grabs in this year’s election, and it employs more than 350,000 hospitality workers in Las Vegas and Reno, many of them dependent on tips for much of their income. Joe Biden won Nevada in 2020 by less than 34,000 votes. So poaching just 10% of the state’s hospitality vote could bring Trump six badly needed electoral votes. That very smart waitress might have been moonlighting as a Trump campaign consultant.
Could it happen? Could the next president eliminate taxes on tips? Don’t bet your paycheck on it. Congress would have to pass legislation authorizing such a move, which would forfeit a lot of government revenue and create vast new opportunities for millions of Americans to game the tax system already lacerated with loopholes.
“It’s really hard to draft a sensible tax rule to exempt tips,” Steve Rosenthal, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center, told Yahoo Finance recently. “How do you separate tips from wages? Do we really want more employees requesting tips rather than wages, like our grocery tellers, our plumbers? I think this idea has a lot of problems.”
Here’s an extreme example of how far awry this idea could go. After Trump raised his idea of exempting tip income at the Republican convention in July, two GOP senators introduced the “No Tax on Tips Act.” An analysis of that bill by the left-leaning Center for American Progress found that such a law might allow hedge fund managers and others with 9- or 10-digit incomes to restructure their pay as tips, slashing their tax bills. That analysis also pointed out that most low-paid Americans don’t earn tips and wouldn’t benefit at all from an exemption on tip income.
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Even if you could structure such a bill to prevent wealthy tax dodgers from cashing in, it would favor one group of taxpayers at the expense of others. Eliminating the federal tax on tips would reduce federal revenue by as much as $25 billion per year, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. That’s not a ton, but it would come at a time when pressure is intensifying to generate more federal revenue, not less, as Medicare and Social Security come closer to running short of money and financial markets are beginning to signal that Washington is issuing too much debt.