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TaxVox

The voices of Tax Policy Center's researchers and staff

Federal Budget and Economy

Why Are Republicans Opposing Medicare Cost Controls?

September 29, 2009 –
Democrats are proposing to control future Medicare costs, and Republicans are trying to stop them. Who knew? This could have been the perfect “Nixon in China” moment. Democrats—who created Medicare and for decades resisted GOP moves to curb the program—control Congress and the White House. A Democratic President has embraced modest efforts to slow the program’s unsustainable rate of growth. Drug makers, doctors, and hospitals all swallow hard and buy into the idea. It could be the perfect moment for a bit of desperately needed fiscal responsibility.
Individual Taxes

Big Government and Housing

September 24, 2009 –
We’ve been hearing an awful lot lately about big government taking over the health insurance business. But there may be no commercial transaction in the country more heavily subsidized than housing. And now, many of the very people who are in a panic over government interference in medical care want to increase Washington’s role in home ownership.
Individual Taxes

Estimating Health Reform Costs: A Cautionary Tale

September 22, 2009 –
Years ago, when I first started writing about health care, I came across a press release that said three new cardiac centers had opened in a Midwestern city and that, as a result, the costs of heart care in that town were expected to rise. This seemed contrary to all I had ever learned about supply and demand. But it was a powerful lesson. Health care economics, it turns out, is an oxymoron. The normal rules don’t apply.
Individual Taxes

Baucus-care: The Gift of the Magi

September 17, 2009 –
One of our readers, Kevin, wrote to say he was confused by my description yesterday of the premium subsidy in Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus’ health reform plan as a tax credit. “It sounds like a voucher to me,” he wrote. Sounds like a voucher to me too. Except it isn’t. The proposal would work like this: Everyone would be required to buy insurance, and low- and moderate-income people would get a government subsidy to help out with the premiums. The subsidy, however, is designed as a refundable tax credit paid directly to insurers. The size of the credit is based on an immensely complicated sliding scale.
Individual Taxes

The Baucus Health Bill and Taxes

September 16, 2009 –
Lots for tax wonks to chew over in Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus’ health bill. The measure, which has yet to garner any Republican support, is already being called an opening gambit and is likely to be revised as it heads to committee markup next week. Still, it is an indication of how intertwined tax and health policy have become in recent years. Here are some of the key provisions:
Individual Taxes

Big Government: Much Bigger Than You Think

September 15, 2009 –
Last weekend, while tea party protestors flocked to Washington to complain about taxes and big government, I was meeting in Toronto with other tax policy wonks for two days of technical discussions on tax expenditures: tax-code provisions that target special benefits to selected taxpayers or activities. And we found that, increasingly, the big government the tea party people fear is doing its business through this pseudo-spending.
Individual Taxes

President Obama’s Health Speech

September 10, 2009 –
As rhetoric, President Obama’s speech last night was an A+. As policy, it was the clearest description we’ve yet heard of what he really wants. As a step towards getting a bill passed...we’ll see. Here are some thoughts about what the President said. After a summer of confusion, Obama told us what he wants health reform to look like: Everyone would be able to buy insurance at a reasonable price, regardless of health status; everyone would have to purchase coverage; government subsidies would be available to help many (though not all) of the uninsured buy coverage; and any bill would be fully funded. This is insurance restructuring, not system reform. Still, if Washington can pull it off, it would be a very impressive achievement.
Individual Taxes

My Friend, Bernie

September 9, 2009 –
A review of books on Bernie Madoff in a recent Sunday Washington Post caught my eye because it reminded me of a high school friend. The review describes an assignment given to Madoff and his high school classmates in the 1950s to read a book of his choosing and make an oral report in class. Bernie didn’t get a book read, and when his turn came in class invented and described a non-existent book. When asked to produce the book, he explained he didn’t have it because he had already returned it to the library! And, although some of his classmates were suspicious, no one turned him in. Thus began the career of the great fraudster.
Individual Taxes

The Health Reform Plan You’ve Never Heard Of

September 8, 2009 –
Before you give up entirely on the idea of health reform, take a look at the Healthy Americans Act, a broad-based reform bill with some interesting tax provisions sponsored by senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Robert Bennett (R-Utah).
Individual Taxes

Ending the Roth Rollover: Why Stop There?

September 4, 2009 –
Howard Gleckman made a strong case yesterday for repealing the provision that allows unlimited conversions of traditional (deductible) IRAs into Roth accounts beginning next year. Today, Len Burman adds the totally sensible suggestion that Congressional scorekeepers display the present value costs of such provisions, so we’ll know that they cost the government money in the long run despite the short-run revenue pickup in the budget window.
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Brief

The Tax Gap’s Many Shades of Gray (Brief)

Daniel Hemel, Janet Holtzblatt, Steven M. Rosenthal
February 22, 2022

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Meet the Experts

  • Howard Gleckman
    Senior Fellow
  • Mark J. Mazur
  • Kim S. Rueben
    Sol Price Fellow
  • Janet Holtzblatt
    Senior Fellow
  • Eric Toder
    Institute Fellow and Codirector, Tax Policy Center
  • William G. Gale
    Codirector
  • Leonard E. Burman
    Institute Fellow

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