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76 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1999)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0073 and id is 1 raw text is: IRET
March 5, 1999 No. 76
USE BUDGET SURPLUSES FOR TAX
REFORM
Although the Clinton Administration projects
enormous federal budget surpluses-$4.5 trillion
over the next 15 years-it opposes using even one
cent of that for a net tax cut.  Instead, the
Administration's budget plan calls for using some of
the projected surpluses to expand the size of
government, while reserving the majority for debt
repayment. Its proposed budget actually seeks,
according  to  the  Administration's  numbers,
$78 billion of tax increases and $26 billion of user

distortion by piling additional layers of tax (for
instance, the corporate income tax and the estate and
gift tax) on saving and investment and their returns.
The differentially heavy taxation of saving and
investment naturally discourages those activities.
Because saving and investment largely determine
the quality and quantity of the capital stock and
because the capital stock powerfully influences
people's ability to produce goods and services, the
sorry result of the tax biases is a smaller, less
productive economy.
The tax system also penalizes working and
earning taxable income because of its high and
graduated marginal rate structure. Again, the result
is a smaller, weaker economy.
An additional problem with the tax system is its
complexity.  According to some estimates, tax
paperwork takes away from productive activities the
equivalent of several million full-time workers, at an
economic cost of hundreds of billions of dollars.
The key to easing tax biases is to lower tax
rates at the margin on the activities being overtaxed.

fee increases (higher taxes by
another name, essentially) over
the next five years.    The
Administration  would  also
provide $33 billion of targeted
tax cuts, mostly for politically
favored groups and causes.
This tax-and-spend budget
strategy would squander the
surpluses.  What should be
done is to use the funds to
begin repairing some of the
worst failings of the current
tax system. The tax system is
virulently biased against saving
and investment. One source of

Although

the Clinton

Administration projects enormous
..feder  budget sphluses-$4.5
trillion ovler the next 15 year-s-it
opploses utsing ev~en one cent of
that fior a net tax cutt... [Its
proposed budget actually seeks...
$78 billion of tax increases and
$26 billion of utser fiee incr-eases...
over the next fivie year-s.

the bias is a basic

marginal tax rate

Tax rates at the margin are
what matter because they
determine how strongly taxes
push people to   alter their
behavior. People may choose
to work a few more hours a
week or weeks a year, or to
retire sooner or later. They
may choose to save and invest
a bit more or a bit less. It is
the tax on the incremental,
marginal income that affects
their decisions.
Taxes at the margin can be
brought down by lowering
schedules. They can also be

defect in the income tax: it taxes earnings used for
consumption once but earnings that are saved twice.
The tax system then aggravates the basic anti-saving

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

reduced by correcting flaws in the tax code that
raise effective marginal tax rates because they
overstate income (by either undercounting legitimate

IRET is anon-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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