On November 29, 2010, TPC co-director William Gale held a live webchat on the Washington Post website to discuss his November 28th Washington Post piece, Five Myths About Cutting the Deficit.
This article examines the economic benefits of alternative minimum tax reform relative to the current policy baseline. The authors find that AMT reform can lead to improved progressivity, greater efficiency, and a lessened compliance burden while raising an equal amount of revenue.
Budgets may be boring, but the stakes before us are exceedingly high. As we go about reducing the deficit, who will pay which taxes? How will we defend our country? And how will we treat our elderly? Unfortunately, questionable thinking and outright distortions by critics from across the...
Plans to rein in the U.S. budget deficit remain in the spotlight as the Bipartisan Policy Center's Debt Reduction Task Force released its plan to solve the debt crisis. TPC expert William Gale offers analysis of the recommendations and includes recommendations of his own.
In a contribution to the New York Times Room for Debate, Donald Marron argues that the best way for the government to raise new revenue would be to reduce and in some cases eliminate many of the exemptions, exclusions, deductions, and credits that make Swiss cheese of our tax system.
Complexity plagues the tax code for low-income families, particularly with regard to child related credits. Many analysts advocate separating out the essential functions of these credits: subsidizing work, subsidizing children, and subsidizing specifi c activities such as child care. This paper...
We link below to distribution tables for the tax reform proposal put forward by the Bipartisan Policy Center Debt Reduction Task Force on November 17, 2010. We provide estimates for the plan as it would look in 2022, 10 years after its proposed enactment, evaluated at 2018 income levels. We...
Originally posted November 16, 2010. Updated on November 18, 2010, to include analyses in which only the income tax expenditures are eliminated but payroll tax expenditures remain. Updated again on November 24, 2010, to include an additional option that would retain 80 percent of the tax...
Provisions in the tax law that benefit families with children include the child tax credit, personal exemptions for dependent children, the earned income tax credit, availability of head of household filing status, the child and dependent care credit, and tuition tax credits and deductions for...
The debate over extending the 20012003 tax cuts beyond 2010 has revolved around two options: extend all provisions for all taxpayers, and the presidents proposal to extend all provisions except those that apply only to high-income taxpayers. A third option has drawn attention: extend the...
Live Q&A: Five Myths About Cutting the Deficit
On November 29, 2010, TPC co-director William Gale held a live webchat on the Washington Post website to discuss his November 28th Washington Post piece, Five Myths About Cutting the Deficit.
...
Alternative to the Alternative: The Economic Effects of AMT Reform
This article examines the economic benefits of alternative minimum tax reform relative to the current policy baseline. The authors find that AMT reform can lead to improved progressivity, greater efficiency, and a lessened compliance burden while raising an equal amount of revenue.
Five Myths About Cutting the Deficit
Budgets may be boring, but the stakes before us are exceedingly high. As we go about reducing the deficit, who will pay which taxes? How will we defend our country? And how will we treat our elderly? Unfortunately, questionable thinking and outright distortions by critics from across the...
Taxes and the Deficit Reduction Plans
Plans to rein in the U.S. budget deficit remain in the spotlight as the Bipartisan Policy Center's Debt Reduction Task Force released its plan to solve the debt crisis. TPC expert William Gale offers analysis of the recommendations and includes recommendations of his own.
Clean Up the Tax Code
In a contribution to the New York Times Room for Debate, Donald Marron argues that the best way for the government to raise new revenue would be to reduce and in some cases eliminate many of the exemptions, exclusions, deductions, and credits that make Swiss cheese of our tax system.
Simplicity: Considerations in Designing a Unified Child Credit
Complexity plagues the tax code for low-income families, particularly with regard to child related credits. Many analysts advocate separating out the essential functions of these credits: subsidizing work, subsidizing children, and subsidizing specifi c activities such as child care. This paper...
Distribution Estimates for Bipartisan Policy Center Tax Reform Proposal
We link below to distribution tables for the tax reform proposal put forward by the Bipartisan Policy Center Debt Reduction Task Force on November 17, 2010. We provide estimates for the plan as it would look in 2022, 10 years after its proposed enactment, evaluated at 2018 income levels. We...
UPDATED: Distributional Estimates for Several Variants of Option 1 of the Bowles-Simpson "Chairmen's Mark"
Originally posted November 16, 2010. Updated on November 18, 2010, to include analyses in which only the income tax expenditures are eliminated but payroll tax expenditures remain. Updated again on November 24, 2010, to include an additional option that would retain 80 percent of the tax...
Tax Savings From an Additional Child
Provisions in the tax law that benefit families with children include the child tax credit, personal exemptions for dependent children, the earned income tax credit, availability of head of household filing status, the child and dependent care credit, and tuition tax credits and deductions for...
A New Tax Bracket for Millionaires?
The debate over extending the 20012003 tax cuts beyond 2010 has revolved around two options: extend all provisions for all taxpayers, and the presidents proposal to extend all provisions except those that apply only to high-income taxpayers. A third option has drawn attention: extend the...