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215 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2006)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0212 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.

December 1, 2006

Advisory No. 215

UNFINISHED R&D BUSINESS FOR THE LAME DUCK

The election  results notwithstanding, the
outgoing Congress has unfinished business, and it
owes the public a solid week's work before it wraps
up for the year. This piece looks at two important
items of business that need immediate attention.
Item 1. The R&D credit needs to be extended.
There are a number of expiring tax provisions with
bipartisan support that should have been renewed as
part of earlier legislation. Unfortunately, the earlier
vessels sank  beneath the   weight of more
controversial provisions.
The most critical provision is extension and
modification of the R&D Tax Credit. The credit
was allowed to lapse at the end of 2005. Thousands
of businesses have proceeded with R&D work on
the expectation that it would be renewed seamlessly
for 2006. Failure to renew the credit this month
would cause a major shock to the R&D community.
There is no guarantee that there will be a tax bill in
the early part of 2007, or that the credit, if not
renewed by the end of this year, would be reinstated
for 2006.
Ideally, the provision should extend the credit
for 2006 and 2007, and should include for 2007 the
improvement developed by Representative Nancy
Johnson and others after much study and hard work
in committee. The improvement would provide an
additional alternative credit formula that better fits
the situation of companies that do not get reasonable
access to the current credit. These include firms
whose R&D    efforts have grown, but whose
acquisition of new start-ups or non-R&D-intensive
businesses have, respectively, distorted the base
period amount, or diluted the share of R&D in the
revenues of the combined enterprise. Either of these

events reduces the firms' eligibility for the current
credit, and results in irrationally unequal research
incentives across companies.
The extension and additional formula have had
bipartisan support, and have been part of several
bills considered earlier in the session, only to be
removed as the credit and other extenders were
bounced from slot to slot to improve the chances for
passage of one bill or another.   A   two year
extension is necessary. If the credit is only renewed
through 2006, the fate of the new alternative
formula due to become effective in 2007 would be
uncertain, which would adversely affect R&D
spending in the new year.
The perennial uncertainty surrounding the R&D
credit reduces its effectiveness. For any level of the
credit, there would be more R&D if it were made
permanent and certain. Uncertainty raises the risk-
adjusted return that businesses must anticipate if
they are to proceed with the R&D projects; with
uncertainty, fewer projects qualify for funding.
The United States and other nations offer R&D
incentives because there are positive spill-over
effects (externalities) from R&D that benefit the
whole economy. These benefits make the value of
R&D to the country greater than the returns
accruing to the researchers, resulting in under-
investment in R&D. The incentives are designed to
redress this problem.
Multi-national businesses can easily do their
R&D either here or abroad. If the United States is
not an attractive site for such activity, it will move
out. R&D performed here generates export earnings
for U.S. companies from license fees and royalties,

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