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271 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2010)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0268 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.

December 8, 2010

Advisory No. 271

THE TAX COMPROMISE

The Congressional leadership and President
Obama have agreed on a tax compromise. It would:
0   Extend the Bush income tax cuts for two years,
including the tax rate reductions in the top brackets
affecting upper income taxpayers, and various tax
credits that are part of the Bush tax cuts, including
increases in the Earned Income Credit (EIC), child
credits, and education credits;
0   Reimpose an estate tax at 35% top rate with a $5
million exempt amount for two years (restoring the
tax at the levels in effect in 2009, after it had lapsed
entirely for 2010);
0   Reduce the employee share of the retirement
portion of the payroll tax by two percentage points
for 2011 (from 6.2% to 4.2%);
0   Increase the temporary 50% expensing provision
to 100% for 2011 for some investments, followed by
a return to 50% for 2012.
0   Enact a number of extenders including a two
year alternative minimum tax (AMT) patch and
renewal of the R&E tax credit.
0   Extend  long  term  unemployment benefits
through 2011.
It is incorrect to analyze the economic effects of
the tax changes by looking at how much money they
leave people to spend. The government will have to
increase its borrowing by a similar amount, offsetting
any immediate demand effects of the tax relief.

Instead, one should look at the incentive effects
of the tax changes - how much more people get from
working an extra hour or saving and investing an
extra dollar. That is what determines the quantities
of labor and capital available for producing output
and income.   We employ a neoclassical model
combined with a tax calculator that responds to
changing income levels to calculate the dynamic
GDP and income effects of tax policy changes.1
Without the extension of the income tax cuts, we
estimate that the GDP and individual incomes would
slip over time by 7.1 percent, compared to levels
achievable under retention of the tax cuts. Note that
extending the Bush tax cuts is not a reduction in tax
rates from current levels. It is the prevention of an
increase.  Without the extension, production
incentives would fall sharply, eventually trimming
about seven percent off the long run path of GDP.
We need the extension of the Bush cuts (along with
the AMT patch and R&E credit) just to keep things
from getting worse. Even the threat of the tax
increases has held back investment and hiring in
recent months. To the extent the threat has been
removed, there will be some improvement in
economic production and incomes from current
levels. The extensions will mean a big improvement
compared to what would occur without them.
The marginal tax rate extensions - particularly
keeping the maximum tax rates on dividends and
long term capital gains at 15% - are the main source
of economic incentives in this package. The biggest
effect is to prevent what would otherwise be a
significant reduction in saving and investment had

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