To the Obama Administration, tax reform means corporate tax restructuring. Both the president and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner have argued that at least the first...
The United States faces a large medium-term federal budget deficit and an unsustainable long-term fiscal gap. Left unattended, these shortfalls will hobble and eventually cripple the economy. The only plausible way to close the gap is through a combination of spending cuts and tax increases. This
Donald Marron's testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures, Committee on Ways and Means on tax policy and small business.
While states are trying to balance their budgets by cutting education and health care as well as aid to local governments, governors are fighting to...
Wisconsin’s ongoing battle over the future of public sector unions has put the question in stark relief: Is public employee compensation causing the states’ current...
Ideological heresy may not quite be breaking out all over Washington, but in the growing debate over the burgeoning debt, there are helpful hints of...
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the limiting of mortgages eligible for interest deduction to $500,000 on primary residences only against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the limiting of mortgages eligible for interest deduction to $500,000 on primary residences only against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 20 percent non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 20 percent non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 27.9 percent revenue-neutral non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 27.9 percent revenue-neutral non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current law baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the limiting of mortgages eligible for interest deduction to $500,000 on primary residences only against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the limiting of mortgages eligible for interest deduction to $500,000 on primary residences only against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 20 percent non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 20 percent non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income level due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 27.9 percent revenue-neutral non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current policy baseline.
Distribution of federal tax change by cash income percentile due to the repealing of the mortgage interest deduction and the introduction of a 27.9 percent revenue-neutral non-refundable credit for qualified mortgage interest paid against a current policy baseline.
The latest Republican talking point is that President Obama is “punting” on his fiscal responsibilities by not proposing deep cuts in Medicare and Social Security...