Jensen article VoorArgument1 #232796 How the Tax Policy Center could improve its Romney tax study. |
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- CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMapLink[1] How the Tax Policy Center could improve its Romney tax study
Citerend uit: Matt Jensen - American Enterprise Institute Publication info: 9 August 2012 Geciteerd door: Peter Baldwin 5:11 AM 31 October 2012 GMT Citerank: (2) 231146The critics challengeCritics of the TPC analysis question the exclusion of two major tax preferences - the exclusion of interest on state and local bonds and the exclusion of inside-buildup on life insurance vehicles. According to the TPC eliminating these exclusions could raise $45 billion in tax revenue.13EF597B, 231239Figure is arbitrarySome have suggested the benchmark definition of 'high income' set by the TPC (and in the general political debate) is too high and have called for analysis where it is set at lower levels. For example Martin Feldstein has defended a $100,000 since this only subjects the top 21% to base broadening.13EF597B URL:
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Fragment- The first aspect that stands out is that Governor Romney has yet to detail what tax expenditures he’d repeal, but TPC assumes that many items are either “on the table” or “off the table.” While some of these assumptions make a lot of sense, others make less. For example, a couple of items that TPC assumes are off the table are the exclusion of interest on tax exempt bonds and the exclusion of interest on life insurance savings. While Governor Romney has professed a desire to keep rates on savings and investment low, maintaining these exclusions is not necessarily what he meant. In fact, both of these exclusions largely benefit the wealthy, and, according to the Treasury Department, added together their repeal would net upwards of $90 billion that could be redistributed to lower-income individuals. That would go a long way towards balancing out the supposed $86 billion windfall for the rich and tax hike on the middle class and poor, and it could make the impossible suddenly possible. While my analysis of those exclusions is nothing if not rough, TPC could do a much better job with the use of their model. So, my dream study would show all of the different combinations of items that could be included to make a revenue-neutral tax reform distributionally neutral rather than placing items either on or off the table and then claiming, given those assumptions, that distributional neutrality is impossible. |