

They and their corporations want another giant tax cut and rollbacks of regulations. It’s simple and one word for it – greed.

By Robert Reich, J.D.
Carmel B. Friesen Professor of Public Policy
University of California, Berkeley
The Business Roundtable is an association of more than 200 CEOs of Americaโs biggest corporations, their most powerful voice in Washington.
Last Wednesday, its chair, Joshua Bolten, told reporters that his group planned to drop โeight figuresโ while โputting its full weight behind protecting and strengthening tax reform.โ
Translated: Itโs going to pour money into Trumpโs campaign to ensure that Trumpโs 2017 tax cuts โ most of which benefit big corporations and the rich โ donโt expire in 2025, as scheduled.
On Thursday, Trump met at the Business Roundtableโs Washington headquarters with over 80 CEOs, including Appleโs Tim Cook, JPMorgan Chaseโs Jamie Dimon, and Walmartโs Doug McMillon.
Trump reportedly promised the CEOs heโd cut corporate taxes even further and curtail business regulations if elected president.
Trumpโs 2017 tax cuts reduced the rate of corporate income taxes from 35 percent to 21 percent. That has cost the nation $1.3 trillion. Those tax cuts, along with the tax cuts put in place by George W. Bush, are the primary reason the national debt is rising as a percentage of the economy.
What have corporations done with the money theyโve saved? They havenโt invested it or used it to raise wages. Nothing has trickled down to average workers.
A large portion has gone into stock buybacks. The year after the tax cut went into effect, corporations bought back a record $1 trillion of their shares of stock. Buybacks raise stock prices โ and, not incidentally, CEO compensation, which is largely in shares of stock.
Making Trumpโs 2017 tax cuts permanentโas the Business Roundtable seeksโwill cost $4 trillion over the next 10 years, $400 billion per yearโand cause the debt to soar.
Yet the CEOs that Trump met with last week have been thriving under Biden.
Corporate profits are way up. Stocks are at near-record levels. Inflation has plummeted. Industries like energy that appeared to be at risk from Bidenโs policies are doing well.
So why are these CEOs attracted to Trump, whose antics are likely to destabilize the economy?
Is it mere ideology?
Kathy Wylde, president and CEO of the Partnership for New York City (a nonprofit that represents the cityโs top business leaders) relates that Republican billionaires have told her โthe threat to capitalism from the Democrats is more concerning than the threat to democracy from Trump.โ
In my experience, CEOs of large corporations are more practical than ideological. Theyโre coming around to Trump because they want even more tax cuts and regulatory rollbacksโwhich means even more money in their own pockets.
The Business Roundtableโs mottoโโMore than Leaders. Leadershipโโsuggests a purpose higher than making its CEOs and corporations richer.
In August 2019, the Roundtable issued a highly publicized statement expressing โa fundamental commitment to all of our stakeholders [emphasis in original],โ including a commitment to compensating all workers โfairly and providing important benefits,โ as well as โsupporting the communities in which we work,โ and protecting the environment โby embracing sustainable practices across our businesses.โ
Signed by 181 CEOs of major American corporations, the statement concluded that โeach of our stakeholders is essentialโ and committed โto deliver value to all of them.โ
The statement got a lot of favorable press. But it was rubbish. At the time,ย Bernie Sandersย andย Elizabeth Warrenย were gaining traction in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries with their criticisms of corporate America, and the CEOs of the Roundtable were worried. They needed cover.
Then, after the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, many of these CEOs announced they wouldnโt provide campaign funds to Republican members of Congress who refused to certify the 2020 election.
Now, theyโre lining up to fund Trump, because they and their corporations want another giant tax cut and rollbacks of regulations.
If the Business Roundtableโs CEOs were honestly committed to all their stakeholders, they wouldnโt seek massive tax cuts.
If they cared about preserving American democracy, they wouldnโt support Trump or any Republican.
The greedy cynicism of Americaโs corporate elite is now on full display.


