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183 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2005)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0180 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 that will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

January 19, 2005

Advisory No. 183

REFORMING TAXATION:
ATTRIBUTES OF A GOOD TAX SYSTEM AND
PRINCIPLES TO GUIDE REFORM*

Since winning reelection, President Bush has
reiterated his call for wide-ranging tax reform and
simplification. He has appointed an advisory panel
of economic and public policy experts to offer
guidance to the Secretary of the Treasury. Treasury
Secretary John Snow has been active in the tax
reform arena, and served as a member of the
National Commission on Economic Growth and Tax
Reform. The possibility of real tax reform is higher
now than at any time since 1986.
The current tax system  is a hybrid.  It is
basically a broad-based income tax, which imposes
multiple layers of taxation on income used for
saving and investment, but it contains provisions
that treat some saving and investment as they would
be treated under a saving-consumption neutral
system (or consumption-based system). Economists
generally acknowledge that a neutral tax system
would result in a higher level of capital formation
and per capita output and income than would the
income tax, and would also be simpler than the
income tax in a number of ways.
The people and their political leaders are used
to thinking in terms of the current tax system. Its
definitions of income and its structure of taxes seem
normal, even though they are often at odds with
reality, logic, and sound economics. It would be
* This paper has been prepared in conjunction with
Innovation, Lewisville, Texas.

tempting for the Commission to operate within the
prevailing mind-set and merely tinker with the
current system. This would not serve the country
well.  Rather, the Commission should use its
position to improve the public's understanding of
the nature of income, what constitutes a sound tax
system in a democratic society, and the advantages
of making significant changes.
The Commission should begin by taking stock
of the purposes and attributes of a good tax system,
to give itself a standard against which to judge the
many proposals it will consider. The Commission
should charge itself with crafting a plan that
improves the formulation of public policy by
making the tax system more transparent to the
voters and less susceptible to manipulation by
special interests, either commercial or political. It
should craft a plan that improves the functioning of
the economy and the level of income. It should
develop and explain its concept of the ideal tax
base, and report what the economic consequences of
that choice would be. In particular, the Commission
should determine whether the reforms that it
proposes would move in the direction of a more
neutral tax base, with a lower cost of capital than
the present system and the potential to increase
capital formation, productivity, and per capita output
and income.
the IPI Center for Tax Analysis of the Institute for Policy

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