Thereโ€™s a lot to like about the Trump tax code reform, especially on the estate tax front:

Republicansโ€™ race to rewrite the U.S. tax codeย on the heels of this monthโ€™s election relies on years of work that is suddenlyโ€”and quite unexpectedlyโ€”poised to pay off.

A 2017 tax overhaul would be a case study in theย benefits ofย dead ends and behind-the-scenes preparation. Failure would show again how hard it is to reshape the U.S. tax system, even with rare political momentum andย one-party control of government.

Republicans have long sought a rate-lowering, base-broadening revamp of the tax code, fusingย differingย business interests within the GOP coalition. Corporations would get a rate cut and lighter taxes on foreign income. So would small businesses, who report profits on their ownersโ€™ individual tax returns. Individuals would get those lower rates and simpler annual tax filing.

Whether the overhaul would give the economy a big lift is open to question. The conservative-leaning Tax Foundation says it would boost investment, after-tax income for all groups and create 1.7 million jobs in the long run. Thatโ€™s an optimistic view. Economic models that are more sensitive to budget deficits suggest more modest results.

Tax Reform Under Donald Trump | Squawk Box | CNBC