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252 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2009)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0249 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.

February 6, 2009

Advisory No. 252

A STIMULUS ALTERNATIVE

A  far simpler, smaller, and better-focused
stimulus package could do more for the economy
than the bloated bill now making its way through the
Senate, at a fraction of the cost. Even at $780
billion, the trimmed down bill is still far too big and
riddled with ineffective and wasteful provisions. The
entire bill, tax and spending provisions alike, should
be pulled and replaced with a few simple provisions
that would address the needs of the unemployed and
get investment and GDP growing moving again.
A simple, effective substitute for the package:
*   The unemployment extension provision from the
package.
*   The Alternative Minimum Tax patch from the
package.
*   Extension  of the 2008   bonus expensing
provision and small business expensing provision
in the package, but make it permanent, or at least
for four years.
*   A reduction in the depreciation life for structures
from 39 years to 25. (It would also help small
businesses if you reclassify built-ins such as
lunch counters and shelving and heating and
cooling systems as equipment rather than parts of
the structure so they can be written off quickly.)
These provisions would:
*   Help people pay their bills until they find new
private sector jobs. (The provision should be
moderate and temporary to avoid prolonging job
search.)

*  Do the necessary AMT patch for the year to
keep millions of middle class taxpayers from
being dragged into the AMT.
*  Encourage investment in equipment by large and
small businesses, putting some of the saving
being done by discouraged consumers to work in
a useful way (not wasting it on pork).
*  Spur the construction of new commercial and
office buildings, which would also put saving to
work and pick up some of the slack from the
depressed home-building sector, not to mention
putting a floor under that end of the real estate
market to prevent the securities market contagion
from spreading. Note that the bonus expensing
provision is for equipment only, not structures
(except specialty structures of 20 years or less).
Yet structures, with their very long asset life, are
the most discriminated against and over-taxed
asset class.
People are saving more, which is actually a
good thing. But that saving has to be put to work
via the credit markets. If private businesses are not
borrowing to invest in useful capital, because it is not
profitable, then we will have a painfully slow
recovery. If private investment is not worth doing,
then the Federal Reserve will be unable to boost
things by creating more bank reserves, because
people will have no motive to borrow. The Federal
Reserve will be pushing on a string.
We can solve that problem by making
investment more profitable, so the private sector will
be pulling on the string, and the Fed will not have to

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