• My Account
  • Sign in
  • Menu
  • Search
  • The Paper
  • Subjects
  • Blog
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Newsletters

London Review of Books

Subscribe
Close

More search Options

  • Advanced search
  • Search by contributor
  • Browse our cover archive

Browse by Subject

  • Arts & Culture
  • Biography & Memoir
  • History & Classics
  • Literature & Criticism
  • Philosophy & Law
  • Politics & Economics
  • Psychology & Anthropology
  • Science & Technology
Close
Close
AcceptClose
Close
Close
    • My Account
    • ·
    • Sign out
    • Sign in
  • Newsletters
  • Home
  • The Paper
    • Latest Issue
    • Archive
    • Contributors
    • About the LRB
  • Subjects
    • Arts & Culture
    • Biography & Memoir
    • History & Classics
    • Literature & Criticism
    • Philosophy & Law
    • Politics & Economics
    • Psychology & Anthropology
    • Science & Technology
  • Blog
  • Podcasts & Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
    • Bookshop
    • LRB Store
    • Close Readings
  • Subscribe
Close

More search Options

  • Search by contributor
  • Browse our cover archive

Browse by Subject

  • Arts & Culture
  • Biography & Memoir
  • History & Classics
  • Literature & Criticism
  • Philosophy & Law
  • Politics & Economics
  • Psychology & Anthropology
  • Science & Technology
LRB blog
  • Blog Contributors
  • Blog Archive
11 January 2018

After the Tax Cuts

E. Tammy Kim

Just before Christmas, President Trump signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act into law. The name of the bill begins with a truth and ends in a lie: there are indeed tax cuts – regressive ones, for large corporations and the super-rich – but there are no jobs. The law will put the country $1.5 trillion in the red over the next decade, despite drastic cuts to social services.


Most Recent

Mamdani at the Crossroads

Niela Orr

The percolating instrumentation of ‘New York’, Ja Rule’s piercing 2004 posse cut, was playing on my TV, and Zohran Mamdani strolled out to...

What France owes to Niger

Rob Lemkin

About ten years ago I visited Dioundiou, a village in Niger two hundred kilometres south-east of the capital Niamey, and met a man known as Albert...

At the Lviv National Opera

Olivia Giovetti

The Lviv National Opera opened to the public on 4 October 1900. It has remained open for the last 125 years under nine different governing authorities...

Tanta Guerra pra Nada

Forrest Hylton

On 30 October, days after the largest police massacre in the history of a city infamous for them, which left at least 121 dead, President Lula...

After the Hurricane

Luke de Noronha

I got a text from Denico last Wednesday afternoon: ‘I’m okay bro it’s a disaster.’ Power remained down across 75 per cent of Jamaica, and that...
Contact
Email: blog@lrb.co.uk

Please enable Javascript

This site requires the use of Javascript to provide the best possible experience. Please change your browser settings to allow Javascript content to run.

About

  • About the LRB
  • Subscribe
  • Publication schedule
  • Advertise with us
  • Bookshop
  • Jobs

Help

  • Contact us
  • The LRB app
  • For librarians
  • Accessibility
  • FAQs

Follow Us

  • Bluesky
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
London Review of Books
© LRB (London) Ltd 1980 - 2025. All rights reserved.
ISSN 0260-9592
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy
Back To Top