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HomeBUSINESSHow Trump's Mega-Bill Altered the Business Landscape and Added $1 Trillion to...

How Trump’s Mega-Bill Altered the Business Landscape and Added $1 Trillion to the Price Tag


Amendments in recent weeks to President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” that made business tax credits permanent and removed plans for a “revenge tax” are being loudly cheered by the business community as tweaks that could help spur new economic growth.

But those changes also — a new analysis confirms — provided the lion’s share of a more than $1 trillion price tag increase to the overall bill in recent weeks.

The top driver of these increased projected costs were amendments around corporate tax credits — things like depreciation, factory expensing, and more — that were in the House version on a temporary basis but were made permanent by the Senate.

That change is likely a more honest accounting (an old Washington trick is to implement a tax cut temporarily to limit the costs but then extend it later) and it’s also central to the GOP case as to why this bill will spur growth.

“This bill is really about locking in pro-growth reforms,” noted former House Ways & Means Committee Chairman Kevin Brady in a Yahoo Finance appearance Thursday morning.

He added that these are key provisions for innovation that “I think are going to be very helpful to the economy.”

But it pushed the projected price tag upward, with this swath of business world provisions moving from a cost of about $519 billion in the House bill to over $1 trillion in the Senate product, according to a new comprehensive look at how the two bills compare from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

The Senate version of the bill is now what appears to be on cusp of being signed into law, with House Republicans likely to approve the bill in the coming hours.

A second change removed a provision that would have allowed the president to levy new duties on multinational businesses in what became known as a “revenge tax.” It was removed after Wall Street objections.

Those two changes — representing a $600 billion increase over the next decade — dwarfed an array of other changes that were made to the now 870-page bill, at least from an accounting perspective.

Other changes — including apparently shallower cuts to things like food assistance and student loans in the Senate version — increased the price tag further. All of those remaining provisions added about $300 billion in increased costs, according to the analysis.

The wave of increased borrowing is set to cost the government another $713 billion in additional interest costs, pushing the increased tally above $1 trillion.

TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump talks to members of the press as he departs from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC on July 1, 2025. Trump is heading to Florida to visit
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters at the White House on July 1. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images) · JIM WATSON via Getty Images

But even as the changes that made business tax credits permanent and removed plans for a “revenge tax” drove up the costs, they were hailed by both Republicans and some business leaders as providing certainty for business.



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