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40 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1995)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0038 and id is 1 raw text is: March 23, 1995 No. 40
TIME TO REPEAL THE AMT
Representative Bill Archer, the new Chairman
of the House Ways and Means Committee, has
added an important tax reform provision to H.R.
1215, the Contract With America Tax Relief Act
of 1995. The Archer proposal would immediately
scale back the alternative minimum tax (AMT)
imposed by current law on certain individuals and
businesses, and repeal the AMT entirely for
businesses in 2001. Scaling back and eliminating
the AMT is a step in the
correct direction because the
AMT     is  complicated,      The AMTs 14
inconsistent with regular tax  out in the r
policies, harmful to economic
growth, and unfair.           hich-tsm
Under   the   ordinary    government-wi
income tax, individuals and
corporations calculate their
gross income   and   next  subtract  specified
exemptions and deductions to determine net taxable
income. They then compute their tax and deduct
allowable tax credits. The AMT is an entirely
separate tax calculation, under which taxpayers
must omit many of the normal exemptions,
deductions, and credits, and calculate a second tax
liability on an expanded version of taxable income
under a lower tax rate. They must then pay
whichever tax bill is greater.

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The exemptions, deductions, and credits related
to business activity under the ordinary income tax
consist overwhelmingly of legitimate adjustments to
income, or to the tax on income.       These
adjustments are made to reflect (sometimes
inadequately) the cost of producing goods and
services for sale or other costs of earning income,
because, until a taxpayer's revenues exceed his or
her costs, no real income or profit can be said to
exist, and no income tax should be due.
The AMT's broader tax base almost always
exceeds the real incomes of the affected individuals
and businesses, and, even at lower AMT tax rates,
may result in higher effective tax rates on the real
earnings of the taxpayers involved than does the
ordinary income tax. Consequently, the AMT
discourages economic activity and retards economic
growth.
Rep. Archer's plan would remove from the
corporate and individual AMT bases many items
that are not included in the regular tax base,
thereby  reducing  the  tax
liabilities of many firms and
laid            individuals  now    in  the
alternative tax            system  and
I tax system,     returning many others to the
axpayers in a     regular tax system. Further,
tails-the-     Rep. Archer's plan   would
)siton.            repeal the corporate AMT in
2001.     Congress's  Joint
Committee    on   Taxation
estimates the 1995-2000 revenue cost at $16.6
billion. Of course, that is a static estimate. In the
real world, the cost would probably be much lower
because a reduced AMT would be less of a
hindrance to economic growth.
The individual AMT originated in the 1960s
after it was publicized that some individuals with
high incomes paid little or no tax. What was
seldom reported is why these people paid little tax.

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 economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N.W., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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