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1 CBO's Use of the Income and Payroll Tax Offset in Its Budget Projections and Cost Estimates 1 (October 4, 2022)

handle is hein.congrec/bsueotei0001 and id is 1 raw text is: he collection of some types of taxes can affect
the revenues generated by other taxes. In par-
ticular, excise taxes and other types of indirect
taxes reduce the revenues derived from individ-
ual and corporate income taxes and payroll taxes. When
analyzing the effects of legislation, the Congressional
Budget Office and the staff of the Joint Committee
on Taxation (JCT) take those effects on revenues into
account.
Indirect taxes are imposed on goods and services rather
than directly on wages, profits, or other forms of income.
In addition to excise taxes, they include customs duties
and certain compulsory governmental fees. Indirect taxes,
whether paid by firms or passed on to consumers, reduce
the income of workers and firms. The reduction, in turn,
decreases the government's revenues from direct tax
sources, such as individual and corporate income taxes
and payroll taxes.
Therefore, when CBO and JCT estimate the budgetary
effects of changes in indirect taxes, they generally reduce
the estimated change in indirect tax revenues by applying
an income and payroll tax offset. The offset represents the
change in revenues from income and payroll taxes caused
by the change in the indirect tax.
The value of the offset varies each year because of differ-
ences in tax law and economic factors but in recent years
has generally ranged from 21 percent to 25 percent of
estimated revenues from indirect taxes; therefore, the net
revenues generated from an indirect tax are only about
three-quarters of the gross amount of revenues collected
from the tax.
CBO applies the offset to budgetary estimates after
accounting for people's behavioral responses to the change

in indirect taxes. The offset is not applied to estimates
of spending proposals or to proposals that affect money
collected by the government through a businesslike or
market-oriented transaction with the public (such as fees
collected from leasing federally controlled land).
This report explains how indirect taxes affect net tax reve-
nues, how the rate of the income and payroll tax offset is
determined, the cases in which CBO does and does not
apply the offset in its cost estimates, and how it reflects
the offset in its baseline projections of revenues under
current law.
How Do Indirect Taxes Affect
Net Tax Revenues?
Indirect taxes place a wedge between the prices consumers
pay for goods and services (spending) and the net income
firms receive (compensation). For example, when a firm
is required to pay a tariff on an imported good, it has less
income to pay to factors of production (the inputs used
to produce goods and services-that is, capital and labor),
which, in turn, are subject to individual and corporate
income taxes and payroll taxes. Consequently, imposing
an indirect tax reduces the amount of funds available to
pay to factors of production and therefore reduces the
government's revenues from existing individual and cor-
porate income taxes and payroll taxes.
The circular flow of income and production in the U.S.
economy illustrates how indirect taxes affect revenues from
direct taxes (see Figure 1). Proceeds from total spending
on goods and services are used to provide compensa-
tion-in the form of wages, profits, rents, and interest-to
those who supply the labor, machines, buildings, and
other inputs that are needed to produce those goods and
services. Taxes imposed on that compensation are consid-
ered direct taxes. (Direct taxes typically account for more

Note: All years referred to are calendar years.

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