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1 Stephen K. Entin, The Tax Treatment of Capital Assets and Its Effect on Growth: Expensing, Depreciation, and the Concept of Cost Recovery in the Tax System 1 (2013)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/bpghxz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: April 2013, Number 67

By
Stephen J. Entin,
Senior Fellow,
Tax Foundation

Congress is debating major reforms of the
corporate and individual income taxes. One
expressed goal of the exercise is to promote
economic growth while lowering the deficit.
Growth is key. Without it, employment and
incomes will suffer, and the hoped-for tax
revenue will not appear. Proper tax treatment
of the cost of plant, equipment, and buildings
is an important and underappreciated
prerequisite for a pro-growth tax system.
This paper seeks to explain the nature of
capital cost recovery as it is currently treated
by business planners, accountants, and the
tax code, and to describe the reforms needed
to produce the best economic and budget
outcomes.
In the early days of the corporate in-
come tax, businesses were allowed to report
the costs of their assets to any schedule they
chose. Later, efforts were made to set rational
guidelines for such reporting based on the
expected lives of the assets. The accounting
profession chose a few methods for financial
statements. The Congress and the IRS chose
different methods for tax purposes (and
changed them again and again). These efforts
were hardly scientific. (Why is the Empire
State Building like a telegraph pole? See

below!) Worse, they focus on fundamentally
unknowable asset lives instead of on the
relatively clear issue of what is best for the
economy.
This is a significant issue. How capi-
tal assets are accounted for in the tax code
dramatically affects what is defined as taxable
income and, thereby, directly influences the
cost of capital. The higher the cost, the less
capital is formed, and the slower the economy
will grow. The lower the cost, the bigger the
economy will be, and with it the number of
jobs and the level of wages.
Getting cost recovery right is immensely
important for the well-being of the popu-
lation. Economic growth, not budgetary
convenience, should be the determining fac-
tor in crafting cost recovery in tax reform.

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