Fiscal Model & Evidence Room · Schedule G Revenue Build-Up
“How do you get $749 billion?”
Every revenue and cost stream in the NSRA fiscal model, on one page, with its statutory authority, baseline source, assumptions, phase-in, sensitivity, confidence, and official-scoring status. Enough for a qualified reviewer to understand the claim, reproduce the public-facing calculation, and identify each assumption.
This is the evidence layer behind the interactive model. Figures are NSRA Year-1 estimates, internally modeled and sensitivity-tested, not an official CBO or JCT score, which is pending and welcomed.
$784.6B
Gross modeled revenue
Sum of the revenue streams below (12 CBO-scored base + supplemental enforcement), full realization.
After program-linked cost netting (−$35B). Realization is a sensitivity lever, not a headline subtraction.
~$554B
Modeled deficit reduction
After ~$196B in revenue-funded program outlays.
Year 4
Central balanced-budget projection
Range Yr 3–5.
$1.9T
Current federal deficit
CBO FY2026 projection.
~$1.6T
Federal borrowing, FY-to-date
debt change since FY start · not the net deficit
~101%
Debt / GDP
CBO Budget & Economic Outlook 2026–2036.
$39.2T
Live U.S. national debt
· U.S. Treasury
Reconciliation. Conservative per-stream assumptions are embedded in the gross estimates; enforcement realization and behavioral effects are sensitivity levers in the interactive model, not additional headline subtractions. The only headline adjustments are program-linked cost netting and revenue-funded outlays, shown in the bridge below.
Less revenue-funded program outlays (BMP coverage, veterans, Child Prosperity Trust, housing support, wage-floor credits, administration)
−$195.6B
Annual deficit reduction
$554.0B
At full realization. Per-program outlay dollar splits are being itemized; the aggregate reconciles to the $554B headline. See the projections CSV and workbook.
Taxonomy. The build below shows 15 rows: 12 CBO-scored base revenue streams plus supplemental enforcement recapture, and 2 program-linked cost rows. Headline revenue is the 12 base streams plus supplemental enforcement. FTT / FTA overlap: the 0.1% Financial Transaction Tax (Sec. 2413) and the 0.02% Financial Transaction Assessment (Sec. 2405) apply to separate transaction classes, retail/broad market versus large institutional trades above $1M, and are scored on non-overlapping bases, so a single transaction is not charged under both.
The ten-year score window
Congressional scoring runs over a multiyear window, so here is the central path. Revenue ramps as enforcement capacity is rebuilt (realization of 86 / 94 / 98 / 100% across Years 1 through 4, then a 2% annual growth assumption), which is why Year 1 is lower than the steady-state figure. The ~$554B headline is the full-realization annual figure, reached around Year 3; the balanced-budget projection is Year 4 central.
Fiscal year
Net revenue
Program outlays
Deficit reduction
Cumulative
Year 1
$640B
$196B
$444B
$444B
Year 2
$717B
$199B
$518B
$962B
Year 3
$764B
$202B
$562B
$1,524B
Year 4
$795B
$205B
$591B
$2,115B
Year 5
$811B
$208B
$604B
$2,719B
Year 6
$828B
$211B
$617B
$3,336B
Year 7
$844B
$214B
$630B
$3,966B
Year 8
$861B
$217B
$644B
$4,610B
Year 9
$878B
$220B
$658B
$5,268B
Year 10
$896B
$224B
$672B
$5,940B
10-yr total
$8,034B
$2,093B
$5,940B
$5,940B
Ten-year deficit reduction totals $5.94T central ($5.23T low, $6.42T high). Every input is separated from the formulas in the downloadable scorer workbook (assumptions, revenue streams, program costs, annual phase-in, ten-year window, low/base/high scenarios, source register, version history), so a reviewer can change any assumption and re-score. This is a preliminary model, not an official CBO or JCT score.
How the math works
How money is captured. The revenue is not a new tax on households. It is captured by recapturing value that already leaves the domestic economy: the offshore tax gap, closed loopholes, restored IRS enforcement, monopoly and rent extraction, mineral-royalty modernization, and a minimum tax on multinationals. Every dollar collected is deposited into the Sovereign Infrastructure Reinvestment Fund (SIRF), a locked Treasury account, and flows back out to fund the benefits. That is the closed loop, revenue in, benefits out, no new borrowing.
The realization throttle. Each stream is confidence-weighted and realization-adjusted. Enforcement capacity ramps over several years, so the model does not assume 100% collection on day one. The central estimate applies conservative realization, and the interactive model lets you set your own realization rate to watch the number move. Nothing here depends on optimistic collection.
The certification gate. Benefits cannot outrun revenue. Major SIRF disbursements require CBO certification, and household relief phases in through a tranche-based escalation lock, Gate 1 then Gate 2, tied to certified SIRF balances. No benefit activates faster than the revenue funding it, so the structure stays deficit-neutral by design.
The reconciliation. Gross modeled revenue of roughly $785B is reduced by conservative realization and program-linked costs to the ~$749B central net figure, and to ~$554B in annual deficit reduction after ~$196B in revenue-funded outlays, with a central balanced-budget projection by Year 4. Every line below is one of the capture streams that adds up to that total.
Preliminary score on published CBO/JCT baselines · pending official scoring
Preliminary Scoring Tool
The headline output is the dollar score; the confidence-coverage percent beside it shows how much of it rests on higher-confidence baselines. Deselect any stream you do not credit and the score recomputes.
Every stream is built on a published government baseline (CBO, JCT, Treasury, OECD, and peer agencies). This is a preliminary score, pending official scoring, which is welcomed.
Revenue streams — deselect any you do not credit
Scoring conventions
Share of each stream actually collected as capacity ramps.
Preliminary score · pending official scoring
$0B
Year-1 net revenue
0%
High/mod confidence
Annual deficit reduction$0B
10-year revenue$0T
Streams selected15 / 15
Central balance yearYear 4
Preliminary score. Built from the streams above, each anchored to a published CBO, JCT, IRS, Treasury, OECD, BEA, GAO, or peer-reviewed baseline (FY2025), using the conventions and selections you set. It is a preliminary aggregation pending official scoring, which is welcomed, and reflects scoring conventions rather than the line-by-line microsimulation an official score performs.
Revenue streams, evidence cards
SS payroll cap elimination
$150B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2408
Mechanism
Apply Social Security payroll tax to wages above the current taxable maximum.
Baseline source
SSA Trustees / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Applied above the current wage cap; no avoidance leakage beyond historical norms.
Phase-in
Y1–Y2
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Corporate rate restoration 21%→28%
$110B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2409
Mechanism
Restore the statutory corporate income tax rate from 21% to 28%.
Baseline source
JCT
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Static rate change on current corporate base; standard behavioral offset.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Low–Moderate
Confidence
High
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
IRS enforcement fund (net)
$90B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2406
Mechanism
Net revenue from restored, sustained tax-enforcement capacity after administrative cost.
Baseline source
CBO / Treasury
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Realization ramps as enforcement capacity is rebuilt; net of admin cost.
Phase-in
Y2–Y5
Sensitivity
High
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Carbon dividend fee
$85B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2410
Mechanism
Upstream fee on carbon content; portion recycled as dividend, remainder to the fisc.
Baseline source
CBO / Treasury / EIA
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Fee level and coverage per statute; demand response within published elasticities.
Phase-in
Y1–Y3
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
OECD Pillar Two implementation
$75B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2411
Mechanism
Domestic implementation of the 15% global minimum tax (GloBE).
Baseline source
OECD / JCT
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
U.S. adoption consistent with the multilateral framework.
Phase-in
Y1–Y2
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Financial transaction tax 0.1%
$75B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2413
Mechanism
0.1% excise on covered securities transactions.
Baseline source
JCT / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Volume contraction within published behavioral ranges.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
High
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Step-up basis reform (>$5M)
$50B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2412
Mechanism
Limit stepped-up basis at death above a $5M threshold.
Baseline source
JCT
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Threshold indexed; realization timing per JCT convention.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
NIMA domestic gross assessment 0.18% (>$100M)
$39.6B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2404
Mechanism
0.18% assessment on domestic gross receipts of firms above $100M.
Baseline source
BEA / internal build
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Applies to receipts above threshold; narrow base, low rate.
Phase-in
Y1–Y2
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Preliminary
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Federal land + mineral royalty reform
$30B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2414
Mechanism
Modernize below-market federal onshore royalty and leasing rates.
Baseline source
Interior / GAO / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Rate alignment toward state/market benchmarks.
Phase-in
Y1–Y3
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Financial-sector excess-profits assessment
$20B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2415
Mechanism
Assessment on large financial institutions' excess profits.
Baseline source
FDIC / BEA / internal
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Applies to institutions above size threshold.
Phase-in
Y1–Y2
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Preliminary
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
FDVM Medicare fraud detection
$20B
Statutory authority
Sec. 101/103 (Title I)
Mechanism
Recovered outlays from fraud-detection and verification systems.
Baseline source
HHS-OIG / GAO / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Recovery scales as detection systems deploy.
Phase-in
Y2–Y4
Sensitivity
High
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
LBO interest deductibility cap (30% EBITDA)
$18B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2403
Mechanism
Cap interest deductibility on leveraged buyouts at 30% of EBITDA.
Baseline source
JCT
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Consistent with existing 163(j) mechanics.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Carried interest → ordinary income
$14B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2402
Mechanism
Tax carried interest as ordinary income.
Baseline source
JCT
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Standard JCT treatment.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Low
Confidence
High
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
FTA institutional trades 0.02% (>$1M)
$7B
Statutory authority
Sec. 2405
Mechanism
0.02% assessment on large institutional trades above $1M.
Baseline source
JCT / internal
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Narrow high-value base.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Preliminary
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
SNAP retailer fraud recovery
$1B
Statutory authority
Sec. 101/103 (Title I)
Mechanism
Recovered funds from retailer-side SNAP fraud enforcement.
Baseline source
USDA-OIG / GAO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Conservative recovery rate.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Low
Confidence
High
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Program-linked costs
Student-loan zero-interestProgram cost
−$25B
Statutory authority
Program cost
Mechanism
Forgone interest under the zero-interest student-loan provision.
Baseline source
Education / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Cost, not revenue; offset within program outlays.
Phase-in
Y1
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
SPI wage-floor tax creditProgram cost
−$10B
Statutory authority
Program cost
Mechanism
Cost of the Sovereign Prosperity Index wage-floor credit.
Baseline source
JCT / CBO
Base year
FY2025
Model assumption
Cost, not revenue.
Phase-in
Y1–Y2
Sensitivity
Moderate
Confidence
Moderate
Status
Internally modeled
External review
Pending
Official score
Pending
Disclosure & scope. Baseline sources are the published federal, institutional, and academic references a reviewer would use to check each line (CBO, JCT, Treasury, SSA, OECD, Interior, HHS-OIG, GAO, USDA-OIG, BEA, EIA). Base year is FY2025 unless noted. “Confidence” reflects internal modeling maturity, not external validation. All streams are internally modeled; external review and official CBO/JCT scoring are pending and welcomed. Proprietary modeling methods are not exposed where unnecessary; enough is disclosed for a qualified reviewer to reproduce the public-facing calculation. Full basis: Figure-by-Figure Sourcing and Schedule G. Items excluded from the base estimate (e.g., contingent WEA upside) are treated as upside, not counted in the central figure.
Have a scoring question, want a methodology walk-through, or need the revenue assumptions defended line by line? Send it here and we'll follow up.
For CBO / JCT and independent scorers
Everything needed to score it
The bill is designed to be independently scoreable on published baselines, without reliance on NSRA-specific assumptions. Below is every input a scorer needs and exactly where it is provided. Official CBO/JCT scoring has not been performed and is welcomed.
Scoring input
What it is
Where it is provided
Statutory authority
The revenue-creating sections, in full
Bill text + per-stream section cites in Schedule G
Constitutional grounding: authority and protections
For a fiscal reviewer, the question is whether the money mechanisms are lawful. The revenue and spending architecture rests on the Taxing, Spending, and Appropriations powers, with self-executing outlays bounded by certification gates rather than open-ended draws.
The authority the Act rests on
Commerce Clause
Art. I, §8, cl. 3, regulation of interstate commerce and financial markets.
Spending Clause
Art. I, §8, cl. 1, conditions attached to federal funds (coverage, relief, grants).
Necessary & Proper
Art. I, §8, cl. 18, the mechanisms carrying the enumerated powers into effect.
General Welfare
The taxing-and-spending power behind the fiscal and benefit architecture.
The protections built in
Fifth Amendment takings
Market-rate, arms-length divestiture with an independent-appraisal right and Court of Federal Claims review; drafted to satisfy the Penn Central test.
Licensing, not expropriation
Pharmaceutical enforcement is a compulsory license, patent retained, 8%/12%/4% royalty, just-compensation arbitration. Not a taking.
Procedural due process
45/60/180-day pre-deprivation notice (Title XVIII), engineered to Mathews v. Eldridge, plus an ALJ verification warrant before large asset actions.
Article III & jury right
Consistent with SEC v. Jarkesy, civil penalties go to an Article III court with the Seventh Amendment jury right; ALJs handle only temporary asset-preservation.
Nondelegation & major questions
Mandatory triggers are fixed by Congress in statute, supplying an intelligible principle responsive to Gundy and West Virginia v. EPA.
Severability
§205, striking one title leaves the rest of the Act in full force, with a fallback appropriation protecting first-tier benefits.