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266 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2010)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0263 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.

June 9, 2010

Advisory No. 266

EXTENDERS BILL (H.R. 4213) UP FOR ACTION IN SENATE

The House of Representatives has passed an
extenders bill, H.R. 4213, formally named the
American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of
2010. On June 8, the Senate leadership introduced
its own proposal, which makes modest changes to the
House version of H.R. 4213. The bill would extend
a large number of expiring tax and spending
provisions.
The bill can be summarized briefly.
* It renews a large number of expiring business tax
provisions for 2010, including the R&D credit,
protection of financial service firms' income
earned abroad from Subpart F passive income
penalties, and extends or provides new tax breaks
for many types of energy-related projects.
* It renews individual tax provisions for charitable
contributions from retirement plans, energy saving
activities, and certain above the line itemized
deductions for state and local taxes and tuition,
and dozens of other minor subsidies and credits,
many in the energy saving area.
* It reduces various federal limits on state and local
issuance of tax-exempt bonds and encourages
additional  state  and  local borrowing  for
infrastructure and other spending.
* It extends the full federal funding of additional
weeks of unemployment compensation of up to 99
weeks of benefits enacted earlier in the recession.
* It includes a doc fix to postpone cuts in the
reimbursement rates paid to physicians for
Medicare services, and it extends a temporary
additional level of federal matching support for
state Medicaid programs.

The extenders bill is a bad piece of legislation for
many reasons.
The bill would renew several important existing
tax provisions that mitigate the tax burden on capital
formation and business activity. Two of the most
important are the R&D credit and the protection of
financial service firms' income earned abroad from
subpart F  passive income penalties.  These
provisions should be extended.   However, the
extenders bill also contains many wasteful provisions
that should be dropped.
The desirable provisions should be made
permanent.  To the bill's discredit, the good
provisions would only be extended for another year.
Temporary extensions help Congress play its usual
games with the budget totals.
Regrettably, the revenue offsets chosen to pay
for the extensions are permanent tax increases.
Every year, the extenders charade forces taxpayers to
accept permanent tax increases in exchange for
temporary deferral of other pending tax increases. It
is a bad bargain for taxpayers and the economy.
The estimated revenue cost of the key tax relief
extensions is overstated. Without the tax provisions,
the activities receiving the tax relief would be
restructured or not undertaken. Elimination of the
provisions would yield far less revenue than indicated
by the supposed cost of keeping the incentives in
place. Therefore, the need for revenue offsets is
overstated.

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