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, the situation becomes more nuanced, especially for self-employed workers versus W-2 employees who have these amounts withheld automatically.
The Catch: Higher Prices Could Wipe Out Your Gains
Here’s where the proposal gets tricky: replacing $3 trillion in lost revenue with tariffs on imports would likely trigger widespread price increases across the economy. According to the nonpartisan Tax Foundation, the average household could face an additional $2,100 in costs during 2025-2026 simply from higher prices on goods.
Consider some specific examples:
The troubling math is straightforward: if you’re saving $13,614 from eliminated income taxes but facing $2,100+ in annual tariff-driven price hikes (with major purchases creating additional burden), your actual take-home benefit shrinks considerably.
Constitutional Questions and Implementation Hurdles
While the idea sounds straightforward, the Constitution grants Congress — not the President — the power of taxation under Article 1, Section 8. This means abolishing income taxes would require Congressional action and face significant political and practical obstacles. Navigating this legal framework adds another layer of complexity to the proposal.
The Bottom Line: Paper Gains vs. Real Purchasing Power
Abolishing income tax would theoretically give a $100K earner roughly $13,614 in additional annual income. However, the tariff-based replacement system would simultaneously erode purchasing power through inflation, potentially neutralizing most or all of that tax savings.
The key question isn’t simply “Will I take home more money?” but rather “Will my actual standard of living improve?” The preliminary evidence suggests that for most earners, the math doesn’t work in their favor — at least not under the proposed tariff structure.