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19 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1993)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0018 and id is 1 raw text is: IRET
June 3, 1993 No. 19
THE HOUSE TAX BILL: FURTHER
RESTRICTIONS ON DEDUCTION OF
INVESTMENT INTEREST
Under current law, investors may deduct the
interest on money they borrow to purchase stock,
bonds, or other property up to the amount of their
investment income - whether interest or capital
gains. The interest deduction reduces total taxable
income, and in that sense is deductible against

ordinary income subject to the
even if some of the investment
return is in the form of capital
gains subject to a top rate of
28%.    The House tax bill
limits the interest deduction to
the  amount of investment
income (interest) subject to
ordinary  tax   rates,  and
excludes  capital gains  in
computing the deduction limit.
Any   interest deduction  in
excess of that amount would

31% top tax rate

In the House's
situation is one
lender-s ar-e taxed
they r-eceive, and

expenses in the current year. He could deduct the
full interest cost only if he were willing to give up
the 28% tax rate on the $5,000 capital gain.
The House bill would worsen the anti-saving,
anti-investment bias of the tax code, raise the cost
of capital and reduce saving in the United States,
and slow the growth of investment, productivity,
wages, and employment.
The correct treatment of interest outlays and
investment income should not be determined
taxpayer by taxpayer but activity by activity. That
is, the tax should not be set by looking only at a
taxpayer's end of the various transactions in which
he engages. Rather, each separate economic activity
involving a borrower and lender should be taxed, in
toto, in an appropriate way that avoids double-taxing
the economic activity in which they have jointly
engaged.
The economic activity in this case involves an
exchange between the borrower and the lender. The

view, the ideal
in which all
on the interest
borrowers may

not deduct their, interest payments.
This is Heads I win, tails you
lose.

have to be carried forward. (The taxpayer would
have the option of treating some capital gain as
ordinary income to take the interest deduction
earlier.)
For example, suppose the taxpayer had $10,000
in interest expenses, $5,000 in interest income,
$5,000 in capital gains, plus $50,000 in salary.
Under current law, the taxpayer could deduct the
full interest expense. Under the House bill, the
taxpayer could only deduct $5,000 in interest

borrower pays interest; the
lender receives interest. If the
lender is taxed on the interest,
the   borrower  should   be
allowed to deduct the interest.
The interest deduction of the
borrower should not depend on
what the borrower used the
money for or whether his
income   took  the  form  of
capital gains, interest, or tips
from  a paper route.  If the

lender is being taxed on the interest the borrower
pays, the borrower should be allowed to deduct the
interest against any and all income.
The flap over limits on interest deductions,
therefore, is just another case of the House looking
narrowly at the borrowing taxpayer and ignoring the
other side of the transaction. In the House's view,
the ideal situation is one in which all lenders are
taxed on the interest they receive, and borrowers
may not deduct their interest payments. This is

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 inorming the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www. ret.org

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