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Tax Policy & Budget Reform C. Eugene Steuerle Richard B. Fisher Institute Fellow The Urban Institute National Small Business Association Small Business Congress Washington, DC November 28-30, 2012 URBAN INSTITUTE Federal Receipts by Source: 1934-2022 percentages of GDP 20 Other Excise Social Insurance & Retirement Receipts 10 Corporation Income Individual Income 0 1934 1939 1944 1949 1954 1959 1964 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 2004 2009 2014 2019 C. Eugene Steuerle and Caleb Quakenbush, The Urban Institute 2012. Data from OMB Historical Tables and the President's Proposed Budget, FY2013. 'Other' includes estate and gift taxes, customs, and deposits of earnings by the Federal Reserve System. URBAN INSTITUTE Federal Revenues as a Percentage of GDP CBO's Baseline Projection Alternative Fiscal Scenario 25 20 15 10 1972 1982 1992 Source: CBO Budget and Economic Outlook, January 2012 URBAN INSTITUTE 2002 2012 2022 Federal Taxes & Spending per Household ($2012) 2012 2022 Taxes $ 21,000 $ 29,000 Total Spending $ 30,000 $ 37,000 Tax Expenditures $ 9,000 $ 12,000 Interest Spending $ 2,000 $ 6,000 Source: C. Quakenbush and C. E. Steuerle, the Urban Institute, 2012. Revenues, outlays, and interest based on CBO Alternative Baseline projections; tax expenditures based on extrapolation of Treasury estimates. URBAN INSTITUTE The Current Squeeze 25% Percentage of GDP 20% 15% Deficits if all other spending = 0 Resources Left for Other Domestic Outlays Receipts (if tax cuts made permanent) Spending on Social Security, Health, Defense, International, and Interest 10% 2000 2010 2020 C. Eugene Steuerle and Stephanie Rennane, The Urban Institute 2011. Based on earlier work with Adam Carasso and Gillian Reynolds. Authors' calculations based on data from CBO, OMB and OASDI and HI-SMI Trustees Reports. URBAN INSTITUTE 2030 400 The President's Priorities for Changes in Spending and Tax Subsidies between 2012 and 2017 300 Billions, 2012$ 200 293 265 250 100 169 (83) (78) (175) (100) (200) Top 30 Tax Expenditures Net Interest Medicare & Medicaid Social Security Other Mandatory Discretionary Nondefense Defense Source: C. E. Steuerle and C. Quakenbush, the Urban Institute 2012. Data from OMB, FY2013 Budget and Green Book. Other Mandatory includes unemployment insurance, SNAP, other income security programs. Discretionary non-Defense includes, among others, most education funds, and energy. Does not account for interaction effects between tax expenditures. URBAN INSTITUTE Relationship Between Tax & Budget Reform Four ways to reduce deficits (1) Reduce direct spending (2) Raise tax rates (3) Spend less on tax subsidies (4) Work more (& save more) • Example: Raise early retirement age – Biggest budget effect: income tax revenues All except (1) related to taxes URBAN INSTITUTE Taxes & the Budget Reforming federal or state taxes involves dealing with thousands of provisions: Entire revenue side of budget, including special taxes for: Social Security & Medicare & highways Incentives for work & saving (which affect future revenues) Tax rates About 1/4 to 1/3 of all “spending” or subsidies More housing subsidies (e.g., mortgage interest) than HUD A larger low-income subsidy (EITC) than welfare (TANF) URBAN INSTITUTE Focus on Residual • Why attention to itemized deductions & to those making over $250,000? – Both parties afraid to be honest with middle class, and • Republicans oppose top tax rate increase • Democrats want burden at top – The residual: • tax subsidies • hidden tax rate increases – Phase outs: new health subsidies, itemized deductions URBAN INSTITUTE Reality Check Deficits and Itemized Deductions $billion (2015) Deficit (current policy) All individual tax expenditures Repeal itemized deductions Repeal itemized > $50,000 $ 810 $1,160 $ 180 $ 60 Calculations like these, and promised to protect middle class, imply much must be done on the spending side of budget URBAN INSTITUTE Tax Expenditures Expenditure-like preferences in tax code Exclusions, deductions, credits, special rates, timing shifts Goals: social, economic, redistributive Usually targeted at specific groups or for specific activities Other Issues Accounting for them doesn’t make them good or bad Often not “neutral” or efficient E.g., favor one form of energy production over another Some controversy over which to count Most conflicts over capital income taxation URBAN INSTITUTE Top 10 Individual Tax Expenditures, FY2013 (Billions) Employer contributions to health insurance* $ 181 Exclusions for pensions & retirement plans* 165 Mortgage interest deduction and exclusion of net imputed rental income 152 Deductibility of nonbusiness state & local taxes, including property tax on owner-occupied homes 69 Capital gains (except agriculture, timber, iron ore, and coal) 62 Deductibility of charitable contributions (all) 46 Exclusion of Social Security benefits 38 Exclusion of interest on public purpose state & local bonds 26 Step-up basis of capital gains at death 24 Capital gains exclusion on home sales 23 Source: OMB Table 17-2. Notes: *Excludes payroll tax effects. OMB also excludes outlay effects from its estimates. The combined revenue and outlay estimates for FY2013 of the EITC and CTC are $55.7 billion and $40.8 billion, respectively. Extension of the payroll tax cut through CY2012 was also not included in OMB’s standard tax expenditure estimates. Treasury estimates this to be $31.1 billion in FY2013. URBAN INSTITUTE Decline in Fiscal Democracy or Freedom: The Modern Budget Disease Extraordinary promises by both political parties stretching infinitely into the future Building permanency and growth into programs Including automatically growing tax breaks Reducing taxes below levels required to support those programs URBAN INSTITUTE Steuerle-Roeper Fiscal Democracy Index Percentage of Federal Revenues Available for Noninterest, Discretionary Spending 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 1962 1972 1982 1992 2002 2012 -10% Percentage of federal revenues remaining after subtracting mandatory and interest spending. Excludes spending on Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). Data from OMB Historical Tables and CBO Budget and Economic Outlook 2012, Alternative Fiscal Scenario. C. Eugene Steuerle and Caleb Quakenbush, 2012. Based on earlier work with Timothy Roeper. URBAN INSTITUTE 2022 Why It Really is Different This Time Traditional problem: fiscal profligacy year after year Potential for succeeding periods of give-away legislation But long-term budgets in balance What changed? Built in growth in spending Taxes and bills shifted to future generations Both parties try to dictate future before it has arisen URBAN INSTITUTE