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72 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1998)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0069 and id is 1 raw text is: August 13, 1998 No. 72
CBO LOW-BALLS BENEFITS OF
THE GINGRICH TAX PLAN
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) study
of Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich's tax cut
proposal is badly flawed. The tax cut would do
more for the economy than the CBO projects.
Mr. Gingrich has introduced the Economic
Growth Act of 1998, H.R. 4125. Representative
Bill Archer, Chairman of the House Ways and
Means Committee, asked the CBO to analyze the
potential effect of the legislation on economic
growth and revenue. The CBO
report, An Analysis of the
Potential  Macroeconomic       The Congress
Effects  of  the  Economic     (CBO) study
Growth Act of 1998, suggests  House Newt
disappointingly small benefits  proposal is ba
from the proposal.            cut   would
One of the provisions of   economy than
the Act is a proposal to reduce
the top tax rate on capital

Static revenue loss from a rate cut.

A static estimate of the revenue loss from the
proposed capital gains tax rate reduction would be
about $16 billion a year, or $80 billion over five
years.  Using Joint Tax Committee and CBO
methodology, about 70 percent of the static revenue
loss will disappear, on a long term basis, due to
additional trading of assets and reporting of gains.
That would leave a net revenue loss of only $5
billion a year, or $40 billion over 5 years.
The revenue effect does not end with the post-
unlocking revenue estimate, however. The cut in
the capital gains tax lowers the cost of capital, and
raises investment, productivity, wages, employment,
and output. The rise in GDP would bring in
additional revenues from other taxes (the dynamic
effect). The CBO has brought together an advisory
panel of researchers and modelers to examine in
dynamic terms the issue of the effect of the capital
gains tax (and other major tax changes) on GDP and
income. There was, as always is the case among a
group of economists, a divergence of opinion.

Some participants

ional Budget Office
of Speaker of the
Gingrich's tax cut
dly flawed. The tax

1o
the

more for the
CBO proects.

predicted very little dynamic
feedback. Moderate and larger
responses were also predicted.
A middle of the road
dynamic   estimate  of  the
consequences of the rate cut on
the economy would show an
increase in GDP of at least $10
billion.  The higher GDP
would bring in $3 billion in
additional tax revenue, and cut

gains to 15 percent, for taxpayers in the 28% tax
bracket and above, and to 7.5 percent for taxpayers
in the 15% tax bracket. The CBO report focuses on
that provision.  Other provisions, such as full
deduction of health insurance premiums by the self
employed and marriage penalty relief, have less
bearing on economic output, and are not reviewed
(although the proposed cut in the Social Security
benefits tax and earnings test would also boost
saving and employment).

the net revenue loss of the Gingrich proposal to a
mere $2 billion a year. The gain in GDP ($10
billion) would be $5 for each dollar of net revenue
loss ($2 billion). Put another way, not cutting the
capital gains tax rate would cost the country $5 in
lost income for each dollar of tax revenue the
Treasury would save.
That means that everything bought by the
government with the proceeds of this tax costs at

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., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 * Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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