Former Goldman Sachs Group president Gary Cohn is leading the effort to craft President Donald Trump’s plan to overhaul taxes that will be released within weeks, a White House official said.
Unnamed congressional leaders have been consulted on the blueprint, the official said. It’s separate from Trump’s proposed budget, the official said, requesting anonymity because the plan is still under development.
During a meeting at the White House with US airline executives last week, Trump said he had a “phenomenal” plan to revamp business taxes that would be revealed within the next two or three weeks, without offering details. 
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer told reporters later that day that specifics would emerge only in the coming weeks. Still, he said the White House is at work on an outline of the most comprehensive business and individual tax overhaul since 1986.
Cohn, 56, stepped down as Goldman’s president and chief operating officer in December after agreeing to lead Trump’s National Economic Council, an influential panel that helps coordinate and develop the president’s economic programme. 
He was long seen as the heir apparent to Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein.
Cohn said last week that he has been meeting with members of Congress and working on two key goals: cutting corporate income taxes and individual income taxes. He emphasised during a February 3 interview with Fox Business News that he has been focused on tax cuts for low earners.
“We’re not spending a lot of time with the high earners,” Cohn said during that interview. During his campaign, Trump adopted a plan favoured by House Republican leaders that would consolidate the existing seven individual income-tax rates to just three. The top rate would be reduced from 39.6% to 33%.
Cohn also said during an interview on CNBC last week that all options for corporate tax reform are being considered, including the plan favoured by House Speaker Paul Ryan that would cut the corporate tax rate to 20% and tax US companies on their domestic income and imports, while exempting their exports and offshore income. That so-called “border-adjusted” plan has run into widespread opposition from retailers, oil refiners and other industries. 
Major exporters, including companies like General Electric Co, have expressed support.
The former banker has also called for using proceeds from a special tax on US companies’ offshore earnings to help fund an ambitious public-works programme. Under current US tax law, companies can defer paying income taxes on their offshore profit until they return those earnings to the US. As a consequence, US companies have stockpiled an estimated $2.6tn in income offshore.
Trump campaigned on a plan to apply a much lower tax rate – 10% or less as opposed to 35% – to those overseas corporate earnings. Companies would then be free to return that money to America if they wished, and the US Treasury would see a multi-billion dollar infusion.
Some Trump advisers have suggested using receipts from that “repatriation” tax to pay for $137bn in tax credits for private businesses that invest in public-works improvements. In all, Trump has called for spending as much as $1tn to upgrade roads, bridges, airports and other infrastructure.