Trump to outline economic
policy as he seeks to regain momentum
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[August 08, 2016]
By Steve Holland
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Republican
presidential nominee Donald Trump on Monday will outline an economic
plan that includes tax help for working families in a major speech
in Detroit as he tries to regain momentum lost from a series of
self-inflicted wounds.
Trump is to speak at noon EDT (1600 GMT) to the Detroit Economic
Club and advisers said he will focus on trade, taxes, immigration
and regulation. The club, whose members are area business leaders,
is a traditional venue for political candidates to discuss their
economic vision.
The Detroit speech will be Trump's first on the economy since
announcing a 13-man team of economic advisers last week. It also
comes after he slogged through perhaps his worst week as a
candidate, getting entangled in a fight with the Muslim parents of
an American soldier slain in Iraq in 2004 and sparring with
Republican Party leaders.
A Trump campaign aide, who asked not to be identified, said Trump's
economic plan will lessen the tax burden on parents who pay for
childcare because "we don’t want it to be an economic disadvantage
to have children.”
Trump also will propose stronger protections for American
intellectual property and a temporary moratorium on new regulations,
the aide said.
Trump's plans also include proposing a 15 percent corporate tax
rate, an idea that is on his website. The current federal rate is 35
percent.
Members of Trump's advisory group shared their views on policy with
senior Trump aides on Sunday in a conference call, said banker
Stephen Calk, one of the members who took part.
Calk described Trump's vision for taxes as the biggest tax
revolution since President Ronald Reagan in 1986. He said the plan
was to lower the corporate tax burden and encourage U.S. companies
with operations abroad to repatriate profits at a reduced tax rate.
The current corporate rate is 35 percent and Republicans have long
sought to reduce it.
Trump's rough ride last week, plus a boost in support for Democratic
candidate Hillary Clinton after she accepted her party's nomination
at its Philadelphia convention, has taken its toll on him.
A Washington Post-ABC News poll released on Sunday gave Clinton an
eight-point lead, 50 percent to 42 percent. A Reuters-Ipsos poll
from last week had her in the lead with a smaller margin of three
points.
Clinton will offer her own economic vision in a speech in Michigan
on Thursday.
SEEKING MOMENTUM
Trump's Detroit event gives him a chance to regain the initiative
and outline some substantive policy proposals on the economy ahead
of the Nov. 8 election.
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Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump attends campaign
event at Windham High School in Windham, New Hampshire August 6,
2016. REUTERS/Eric Thayer
The New York real estate developer prides himself on his economic expertise and
job-creating ability and blames President Barack Obama for what he calls a weak
recovery from the 2008-2009 recession.
Larry Kudlow, an informal Trump adviser and CNBC commentator, wrote on CNBC.com
that Trump will pledge to lower marginal tax rates on both large and small
businesses and on all income classes. He also will propose an increase in the
standard deduction for families and special deductions for childcare and the
elderly, Kudlow said.
"All of these polices will help the middle class. Trump's plan will generate
substantial new investment, business formation, jobs, and growth – and, hence,
higher wages," he wrote.
Trump has vowed to rewrite some international trade deals, including the North
American Free Trade Agreement of 1994, a deal linking the economies of the
United States, Mexico and Canada and signed into law by Clinton's husband,
then-President Bill Clinton.
Critics blame NAFTA for encouraging the outsourcing of jobs that have taken away
many middle-class employment opportunities.
Peter Navarro, a University of California-Irvine professor who is the only
formal Trump economic adviser with a deep academic background, said one of the
problems Detroit has seen from NAFTA has been a movement of auto manufacturing
jobs to Mexico, citing Ford and GM recently.
Trump also would reduce federal regulations that he blames for stifling economic
activity. To stem illegal immigration, he said he would build a wall along the
U.S. southern border with Mexico.
(Additional reporting by Mike Stone in New York and Emily Stephenson in
Washington; Editing by Bill Trott)
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