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153 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2003)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0150 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

April 15, 2003

Advisory No. 153

TOBACCO SUIT SENDING ECONOMIC STIMULUS UP IN SMOKE?

President Bush has proposed a tax cut of $726
billion over ten years to spur the economic
expansion. The Senate has voted to cut it to $350
billion. Bowing to Senate pressure, the House
allowed for a $550 billion tax cut in its Budget
Resolution, and the President reluctantly agreed.
Meanwhile, the (so-called) Justice Department

has filed a lawsuit demanding
nine tobacco companies, to be
paid over some unspecified
period. If collected over the
same   ten  years  as  the
President's tax cut, it would
take back 40 percent of the
President's  original  tax
proposal, 60 percent of the
scaled back House amount,
and over 80 percent of the
Senate's smaller tax cut.
Does anyone notice an
inconsistency in this policy
mix?

$289 billion from

Modem tax theory doesn't merely measure the
effect of tax changes by their dollar value. Rather,
it looks at their incentive effects or their impact on
resource allocation. Even on that score, this money
grab would be a bad move.
The Justice Department claim would act like a
selective excise tax on cigarette consumers and
producers. Since the companies cannot print money

[Tihe   (so-called)   justice
Depar-tment has filed a lawsit
demanding $289 billion friom nine
tobacco companies... [It would
take back 40 per-cent of the
Pr-esident's or-iginal tax pr-oposal,
60 per-cent of the scaled back
House amiount, and over- 80
per-cent of the Senate's smnaller- tax
cut.  Does anyone notice an
inconsistency in this policy mix?

Justice's  new   federal
tobacco claim is on top of the 25-year $280 billion
settlement the companies reached with the states in
1998. President Clinton then pushed for a federal
lawsuit, which  we labeled   taxation  through
litigation  instead  of  legislation  (IRET
Congressional Advisory, No. 80, May 4, 1999).
That suit was apparently laid to rest, but like
Dracula, it has arisen undead and with impressive
fangs. Presidents come and go, but the bureaucratic
agenda lives on.

falls on a single

or operate at a loss, the entire
fine (if it survives a trial)
would have to be paid by
several tens of millions of
cigarette smokers (via higher
retail prices), tobacco farmers
(lower  commodity    prices),
company   employees (lower
wages) and shareholders (lower
dividends).
Although the tobacco tax,
or its fine equivalent, is
widely regarded as falling on
consumption,  not   income,
increasing it would still be bad
for the economy because it
product and distorts economic

behavior. People work and save to earn money to
buy things. Excise taxes make consumers less able
to buy the things they like in the proportions they
like. For any given amount of revenue raised,
excise taxes make people less happy and less
willing to produce than would an evenhanded broad-
based consumption tax. Excise taxes are bad tax
policy.

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