In a contribution to USA Today, Bill Gale asserts that going over the cliff might be the only way to stimulate the economy and implement gradual, balanced fiscal consolidation over the next decade.
This paper examines the fiscal outlook and tax reform options in the United States. The major conclusions include: the United States faces a substantial fiscal shortfall in the medium- and long-term; both spending cuts and tax increases should contribute to the solution; tax increases need not do
Surrounding many of the debates about the public sector has been one about which government level should be involved in performing which functions. As an empirical matter, both centralization and decentralization have occurred together throughout U.S. history. The vast majority of federalism
Congress and President Obama can't agree on much, but they agree on this: Congress must preserve what they persist in calling middle-class tax cuts. As...
What would happen if Congress extends the 2001-2010 tax cuts for couples making $500,000 or $1 million-a-year instead of $250,000 or less, as President Obama...
Congratulations to University of Michigan tax economist Joel Slemrod for winning the National Tax Association’s Daniel M. Holland Medal for outstanding contributions to the study...
President Obama and administration officials have offered two different revenue targets for the fiscal cliff debate: $1 trillion and $1.6 trillion (sometimes reported as $1.5...
As Congress and President Obama continue to spar over how to avoid the looming fiscal cliff, most public attention has been focused on what tumbling...
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $500,000 for married couples on baseline S.3412 as introduced, by cash income percentile, 2013
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $1 Million for married couples on baseline S.3412 as introduced, by cash income percentile, 2013
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $500,000 for married couples on baseline S.3412 with AMT Patch and 2009 Estate Tax Law, by cash income level, 2013
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $500,000 for married couples on baseline S.3412 with AMT Patch and 2009 Estate Tax Law, by cash income percentile, 2013
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $1 Million for married couples on baseline S.3412 with AMT Patch and 2009 Estate Tax Law, by cash income level, 2013
Incremental effect of raising "High-Income" thresholds to $1 Million for married couples on baseline S.3412 with AMT Patch and 2009 Estate Tax Law, by cash income percentile, 2013