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17 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1993)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0016 and id is 1 raw text is: Advisor
June 3, 1993 No. 17
HOUSE TAX BILL PROVISION ON
MARKET DISCOUNT BONDS:
ASSAULT ON TAX EXEMPT BONDS;
DOUBLE TAX ON SAVING
Bonds are generally issued at face value and
pay explicit interest on the face amount. If interest
rates rise after the bond is issued, the price of the
bond will fall. A new buyer will receive the higher
market interest rate in the implicit form of a
gradual rise in the price of the bond toward face
value at maturity plus the
explicit interest payment in
force at the time of issue. The  In the case oj
gradual rise in price is called  interest is n
accrued market discount.      taxed.   If tht
discount to fa
In the case of original    as the House
issue zero coupon bonds, the  should be not
bond is originally issued at a  if the bond i
discount -  the original issue
discount, or OID -  and all   from chani
interest is paid in the form of  gt ins treatmi
a rise toward face value at   to ordinary
maturity -  accrued OD. In   adjustment is
this case, a market discount  gains from tal
from the accrued OID value
due to a subsequent rise in
interest rates provides added interest to the new
buyer over time. The accrued market discount in
this case is any gain in excess of the rise due to the
accrued OID that constitutes the implicit interest
payments in force at the time of issue.

Under current law, when a bond purchased at
market discount is later sold or reaches maturity,
the accrued market discount is treated as interest
income, taxable at ordinary rates. (A rise in price
in excess of the implicit interest - as would occur
if interest rates subsequently fell - is considered
a capital gain.)
There are two exceptions to the interest
treatment of accrued market discount. Gains on
bonds issued before July 18, 1984 (when current
law treatment began) and gains on tax exempt
bonds are treated as capital gains when the bonds
are sold. (Note that this component of the interest
on tax exempt bonds is not tax exempt under
current law.) The House tax bill would eliminate
these two exceptions, and treat any gain resulting
from purchase at a market discount as ordinary
income.
It is correct to consider as interest the rise in
the price of a bond from a discounted level at time

of purchase towar

c tax exempt bonds,
ot supposed to be
rise from  market
ce valute is inter-est,
admits, then there
ax at all on the tise
tax exempt. Far,
Sthe curr-ient cap~ital
it of such incr-eases
nwome, the corriect
to exempt such
centirely.

the House bill

*d face value at maturity. Bonds
may pay interest explicitly by
coupon   or   implicitly  by
accrual from   a discounted
price. There is no economic
difference between the two
methods. What is at issue is
not whether the price increase
due   to   accrued   market
discount is interest or a capital
gain. What is at issue is the
correct  tax  treatment   of
interest however it is paid.
Under   current law, some
interest is treated correctly,
and some incorrectly. Instead
of moving toward the correct
tax treatment of all interest,
would increase uniformity by

treating  all accrued  market discount interest
incorrectly. In the process, the House bill would
move the tax code in the wrong direction, and
would worsen the current tax bias against saving.

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote econornic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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