00:00Who may face losses under President Trump's one, big, beautiful bill?
00:05President Donald Trump's one, big, beautiful bill,
00:09which recently cleared a significant hurdle in the Senate with a narrow 51 to 49 vote,
00:15is poised to enact substantial changes across various sectors of the U.S. economy and tax landscape.
00:22While the legislation aims to stimulate certain areas,
00:25provisions also suggest potential negative impacts for several groups and economic facets.
00:32These include direct financial burdens on consumers, a weakening of the U.S. dollar,
00:38and significant shifts in federal spending on social programs.
00:43Here are the key entities and individuals who may experience losses or face new challenges under the new law.
00:50American car buyers.
00:51Consumers preparing to purchase new vehicles may face significantly higher costs.
00:57A recent analysis by Alex Partners, reported by Bloomberg,
01:01predicts that vehicle prices in the U.S. will rise by nearly $2,000 per car,
01:07due to new auto tariffs championed by President Trump.
01:11Approximately 80% of this projected dollar.
01:14$30 billion tariff, burden equating to about dollar.
01:19$1,760 per vehicles anticipated to be passed directly to consumers.
01:25Mark Wakefield, global auto market lead at Alex Partners,
01:30explicitly stated that these tariffs bring a big wall of cost,
01:34and that consumers will be taking the majority of the hits.
01:37Such price increases could also lead to a reduction in auto sales by 1 million units over the next three years.
01:44And buyers may face shrinking electric vehicle incentives.
01:49High-income taxpayers.
01:51While the OBBBA includes a temporary increase to the state and local tax deduction cap,
01:57raising it to $40,000 in 2025,
02:00this relief is not permanent.
02:02From 2030 and beyond, the SALT deduction cap is set to return to its original $10,000 limit.
02:10Money expires...
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