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173 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2004)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0170 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.

May 6, 2004

Advisory No. 173

RENEW BONUS EXPENSING TO KEEP RECOVERY STRONG

Recent swings in the economy have mirrored
swings in investment. These ups and downs in
investment and GDP have a lot to tell us about what
kind of tax changes
are  effective  in
Dromotin2 2rowth and

employment,    and
which are not.
The main cause
of the 2001 recession
was a sharp drop in
investment.    For
example, the decline
in  spending    on
equipment      and
software is shown in
Chart 1. The 2001
tax cut contained little
immediate help for
investment, and did
not   reverse  the
decline.

The early stages of the economic recovery, in
2002, were weak because investment remained weak.
Investment in equipment and software turned up
moderately in mid-2002 following the 2002 tax cut,
which  contained  incentives for that type of
investment, boosting GDP. (Chart 1.) Investment in
structures, which received no help in 2001 or 2002,
continued to lag. (Chart 2.)
The economic recovery really took off when
investment in equipment and software surged in
2003, following the 2003 tax cut, which further
boosted incentives for investment and saving, and

made    deferred  tax  rate  reductions  effective

immediately for workers,
Structures got a little help

savers, and investors.
from the capital gains
relief   in  2003;
construction
investment  is  still
weak, but not in free
fall. (Charts 1 and 2.)
Moral: Only those tax
changes that affect
what ails the economy
work to   strengthen
GDP    and  employ-
ment, and they do so
only   when    they
become effective.
Warning:    If  the
investment and work
incentives     that
boosted growth are

allowed to expire, the economy will be back in the
soup.
Analysis: Investment rose for ten years following the
1990 recession, buoyed by technological advances
and falling inflation, which lowered effective tax
rates on investment. With inflation near zero, and
the end of the Y2K spending bubble, that stimulus
had run its course by the end of the decade. Real
private nonresidential fixed investment flattened in
the last half of 2000, and then plunged, taking GDP
down with it. (Chart 3.) Nonresidential investment
consists of investment in equipment and software,
and investment in nonresidential structures (mainly
office and commercial buildings).

6~SI                                                           0   I     lie       I   ~    Agg

Chart 1 Real Private Investment - Equipment And Software
And 2001, 2002, and 2003 Tax Cuts
980
960 -
. 940  -
920
880
0
0
r 860 -_001                                                2003 Tax
o             Tax -  P                              -Cut, 50%
860                .                                        2032002 Tax
820 -                                     Cut, 30%
Expensing
800                               -                   -
2000           2001           2002           2003           2004
Data Source: BEA                  Quarter

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