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83 IRET Policy Bulletin 1 (2001)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretpbul0042 and id is 1 raw text is: March 12, 2001
No. 83

U,        -

PHASE-OUTS INCREASE TAX RATES AND TAX
COMPLEXITY1
The tax code is littered with rules that phase out various deductions, exemptions, and credits as
taxpayers' incomes rise. These rules create hidden increases in marginal tax rates for unsuspecting
citizens and greatly complicate tax calculations. Some of the items that taxpayers lose with higher
incomes are deductible individual retirement accounts, Roth IRAs, the earned income tax credit
(EITC), the exclusion of social security benefits from taxable income, the child credit, education
credits and deductions, a portion of itemized deductions, even the personal exemption.

Phase-outs create troubling problems in the areas of economic efficiency, simplicity, and
fairness. The economy's efficiency suffers because phase-outs raise marginal tax rates throughout
the phase-out zone and thereby reduce incentives to work, save, and invest. For people close to
hitting a phase-out threshold or already in a phase-out zone, phase-out-generated marginal tax rate
spikes are a clear and perverse signal from the government not to work harder and not to save and
invest more. Tax simplification is another victim. Phase-outs make the tax code more complicated,
which raises tax enforcement and compliance costs by making the tax code harder to understand and
by making tax liabilities harder to compute. The booklet that accompanies an individual's yearly tax
forms contains an obstacle course of special instructions and worksheets testing whether various
phase-outs affect the taxpayer and, if so, how much each relevant phase-out restricts the deductions,
exemptions, or credits the taxpayer may claim. Further, although phase-outs are often called fair
because they tend to increase tax progressivity, the arbitrariness and surreptitiousness of most phase-
outs violate any reasonable standard of fairness.
' This paper expands and updates (to tax year 2001) an earlier IRET study on phase-out provisions in the tax code:
Michael Schuyler, Phase-Outs Are Bad Tax Policy, IRET Economic Policy Bulletin, No. 71, January 1998.

Institute for
Research
on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)3 economic policy research and educational
organization devoted to informing the public about policies that will promote
economic growth and efficient operation of the market economy.
1730 K Street, N.W., Suite 910 9 Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 463-1400 - Fax (202) 463-6199 9 Internet www.iret.org

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