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239 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2008)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0236 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.

May 2, 2008

Advisory No. 239

THE SENATE'S MISGUIDED HOUSING BILL

On   April 10, the Senate approved   the
Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008 (H.R. 3221)
by an 85-15 margin. The proposed legislation is a
package of tax and other incentives intended to assist
the housing sector. Senator Max Baucus (D-MT),
chairman  of the Senate Finance Committee,
described it as help for home buyers, home-builders,
and homeowners, and ... much needed support for
the housing market (Congressional Record, April 8,
2008, S. 2719).
This paper examines the main provisions in the
bill  and  evaluates  their  likely  economic
consequences. Would they strengthen the housing
sector, be ineffective, or actually hurt?  More
important would they help the troubled U.S.
economy?
The paper also looks at two legislative proposals
in the House of Representatives.
The economic situation
Before examining the bills in detail, it might be
useful to review briefly the current mess in the
economy and the housing market. The current
economic weakness is due only in part to the
bursting of the housing bubble, which has reduced
construction spending.  A  broader source of
economic weakness is a slowdown in investment
across the board. A surge in capital formation and
investment was triggered by the lowering of tax rates
on capital in the 2003 Tax Act. That added capital
formation has run its course. If we want a further
round of capital growth, we need to further reduce

the tax on capital.  That requires not merely
extending the 2003 tax cuts, but going beyond that,
to reduce the corporate tax rate and make the
bonus expensing provision of the recent stimulus
bill permanent. And that is what the Congress
should focus on.
In recent quarters, we have been relying on the
Federal Reserve to prop up the general economy by
sticking with easy credit and the rapid growth of
bank reserves far longer than was wise. Inflationary
signs are now appearing, in the form of a plunging
dollar, soaring commodity prices, and upticks in the
U.S. price indices (especially for food and fuel).
Higher inflation will further depress investment by
raising tax rates on capital, because capital
consumption allowances (depreciation deductions)
and capital gains are not adjusted for inflation. The
excessive easing by the Federal Reserve cannot
continue without doing serious economic damage to
the U.S. and world economies, and to the role of the
dollar as the primary international currency.
Housing market problems
An extraordinary housing bubble, during which
home prices seemed only to rise and never fall, led
to excessive investment in the housing sector relative
to the rest of the economy.  There were two
contributing factors to the housing bubble. One was
that the Fed kept monetary policy too easy for too
long. The other was the invention of, and global
credit market mania for, consolidated    debt
instruments  (mortgage   backed   securities).
Abnormally low interest rates courtesy of the Fed led

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