Tax Policy Fiscal Context, Economic Principles, and Concepts
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Transcript Tax Policy Fiscal Context, Economic Principles, and Concepts
Tax Policy
Fiscal Context and Economic Concepts
Molly Sherlock
Washington & Lee University
January 23, 2015
The U.S. Fiscal Position
Revenues and Outlays: FY1970 – FY2013
Source: CRS Report R43472, The Federal Budget: Overview and Issues for FY2015 and Beyond, November 4,
2014, by Mindy Levit.
2
Persistent Budget Deficits Increasing Debt
3
Why is Spending Projected to Increase?
4
Changing Demographics are Increasing
Pressure on the Federal Budget
5
Federal Revenue by Source: 1946-2017
% of GDP
12%
Individual
Income Taxes
9%
6%
Social Insurance
and Retirement
Receipts
3%
Corporation
Income Taxes
Other
Excise Taxes
FY15
FY10
FY05
FY00
FY95
FY90
FY85
FY80
FY76
FY71
FY66
FY61
FY56
FY51
FY46
0%
FY14-FY19
are estimates
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Federal Revenue by Source: FY2013
Corporate
Income 10%
Excise 3%
Individual
Income 47%
Payroll 34%
Other 6%
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Why Tax Reform?
Raise additional revenue?
U.S. fiscal position is “unsustainable”
Over time… spending will have to be cut, or taxes
increased
Improve the system?
What does an improvement look like?
Economic tools for evaluating tax policy
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Economic Concepts: Equity
Is the tax system “fair”?
Two concepts for evaluating fairness:
Vertical equity
Higher burdens on those with a greater ability to pay
Horizontal equity
Equal treatment of equals
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Evaluating Vertical Equity
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Evaluating Horizontal Equity
Those with “equal ability to pay” should pay equal taxes
Measuring ability to pay
Casualty losses
Medical expenses
Similarly situated individuals
Marriage penalties
Homeowners vs. renters
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Economic Concepts: Efficiency
Taxes distort behavior
A goal of tax policy
Meet revenue targets with
minimal distortions
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Balancing equity and efficiency
Cutting taxes on capital (investment) income
Wage credits for low-income workers
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Economic Concepts:
Simplicity and Revenue Sufficiency
What makes taxes complicated?
Measuring income
Taxes as social policy
The purpose of taxes is to pay for the government’s
activities
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Income Taxes: Computing Taxable Income
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Average Tax Rates Paid
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About those “Loopholes”
FY2013 Tax Expenditures (billions)
Provision
Amount
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Exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance
294.3
2
Mortgage interest deduction
100.9
3
401(k) plans
72.7
4
Lower rate on capital gains
62.0
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EITC
55.7
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Pensions
52.3
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State and local tax deduction (excluding property tax)
46.3
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Tax deferral for multi-nationals
41.8
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Child tax credit
40.8
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Charity deduction (other than education, health)
39.8
Source: US Budget, Analytical Perspectives, FY2013
Note: Health insurance estimate includes $113.7 billion payroll tax expenditure; EITC and child tax credit include
outlays of $52.6 and $22.4 billion, respectively
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And what about those “47%”?
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