The Trump Administration Dilemma on Tax Reform

This post originally appeared on TaxVox.

Q: Since the modern federal income tax was created in 1913, how often has Congress enacted a revenue-neutral income tax reform that significantly expanded the tax base and lowered rates??

A: One. In 1986.

It is no wonder that the Trump administration—like others before it—is struggling with broad and systemic tax reform. To better understand why, think of tax legislation in three distinct flavors: tax cuts, tax increases, and revenue-neutral changes.

Most income tax bills cut taxes. The reason is obvious. Elected officials like to give something to voters rather than take something away from them.

Since the large tax increases required to finance World War II, most revenue bills reduced taxes, particularly in the period up through 1981. Significant reductions in defense spending as a share of the economy, along with inflationary increases in incomes that pushed people to pay higher individual income tax rates, made legislated tax cuts possible during what I call the Era of Easy Finance.

In a few cases, Congress did raise income taxes. Tax historians Joseph Thorndike and Elliott Brownlee have shown that almost all major income tax increases came about as a result of war. Others, generally raising annual revenues by well less than 1 percent of GDP, have been enacted, for instance, as part of several deficit reduction agreements between 1982 and 1997.

Broad-based and systemic income tax reform that keeps revenues roughly the same as current law requires a tremendous amount of work, largely because it means broadening the tax base by identifying which popular tax subsidies, now costing more than $1 trillion annually, should be targeted for elimination.

Less broad-based but still systemic reforms are also possible. Outstanding modern examples are the codification effort of 1954 and the 1969 reform best known for addressing tax issues surrounding foundations and charities.

As economic coordinator of the Treasury’s 1984 study that led to the Tax Reform Act of 1986, I remember how difficult it was for Treasury and Joint Committee on Taxation staffs to draft legislation and to estimate cost and distributional effects for those proposals. Increasing taxes on some to pay for tax cuts for others requires tax writers to agree on principles to guide and justify their actions. The political aspects of tax reform, building a political coalition to push to see these principles enacted, are even more difficult than the technical concerns.

Tax reform of the revenue-neutral variety is much harder than merely cutting taxes. To cut taxes, lawmakers simply tally a set of wants, perhaps pare them down to fit within a specified amount, and leave the financing bill for current tax cuts to future generations of unidentified taxpayers.

Finally, the design of any systemic reform must acknowledge the economic and political environment of its time. The 1986 Act, for instance, took advantage of bipartisan concerns over tax shelters, President Reagan’s focus on high tax rates, Democrats’ objections to the rising income taxation of the poor, and social conservatives’ efforts to reverse the rising burden being placed on families with children. Deficits were perceived to be a problem, though a smaller one than today in part because Congress had raised taxes and cut spending in the 1982 and 1984 budget agreements and in the Social Security Act of 1983.

President Trump and his team have promised to cut tax rates for all businesses and for the middle class, while not increasing the deficit. They can’t get there by taxing the poor. Even if they assume greater economic growth, it’s not going to be enough to pay for the historically large tax cut provisions. So what’s left?

Some seem to want simply to throw in the towel on revenue neutral tax reform and just cut taxes instead. But $1.3 trillion in additional spending is already built in for 2026 (largely due to rising interest costs and increased spending on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid). This is far more than the $850 billion in additional taxes projected to be collected for that year due to a growing economy. How will Congress and the president cover that existing shortfall, even before they think of more tax cuts?

That’s the box the Administration is in. And it is why tax reform is no easier than health care reform. Avoiding big new revenue losses requires systemic reform, such as increasing taxes on individuals to offset business tax cuts. Or engaging in true budget reform that includes scaling back on popular programs. Those are the requirements of our time, like them or not, and while briefly they might be ignored politically, over the longer run they can’t be dodged as a matter of either economics or arithmetic.


4 Comments on “The Trump Administration Dilemma on Tax Reform”

  1. Karl Polzer says:

    Good frame of the issues and history. Agree that “…the design of any systemic reform must acknowledge the economic and political environment of its time.” But the political/economic “environment” is far easier to understand in hindsight than going forward. You don’t really know its full limitations and potential for positive change until you try to do something and see if it survives the process.

    • JOE GUTTENTAG says:

      THIS PIECE DOES FRAM THE ISSUES AND HISTORY VERY WELL BUT APPEARS IRRELEVANT IN A WORLD FULL OF OUTRIGHT LIES. CAN’T LIVE IN A DREAM WORLD. NEED TO ANALYZE FROM A POINT OF VIEW THAT TAX REFORM MAY BE DONE WITHOUT REFERENCE TO DEFICIT, CBO DATA OR POSSIBLY EVEN HEARINGS. WHY NOT!!!

    • Michael_Bindner says:

      The_politics_dictate_no_action_or_compromise

  2. Michael_Bindner says:

    The 1986 reform was right for its time because no one understood that lower marginal tax rates for the wealthiest taxpayers led them to demand lower labor costs as investors and CEOs because the government wasn’t taxing away the savings. In prior times, we had labor peace, probably to the extent of causing inflation, because CEOs got nothing back for their efforts to cut costs. Looking back on it, lowering top tax rates (especially on capital gains) simply gave us the S&L bubble, the tech bubble and the great recession, with homeowners using their houses as an ATM and a compliant Fed pumping in the money.

    What how is the interesting question. Many thought that Mike Huckabee had something there when he pushed for the FairTax, not that the FairTax should have been passed as is, but that a consumption tax for most (especially if hidden in employer paid taxes) and an income tax for the few could have made raising money easier. My proposal to the Fiscal Commission was a 13% Value Added Tax, a 33% Subtraction VAT (without about 6% worth of deductions for health insurance and an expanded child tax credit, if not more to privatize other things) and an income tax on the top 20% of households with graduated rates.

    There are two hooks to this plan. The first is for the many to not have to file while still receiving tax benefits. Every April 15 where this is not highlighted is a lost opportunity. The second is to dedicate the remaining income surtax to overseas military and sea deployments, net interest payments (instead of rolling them over) and debt reduction (starting with paying back the Social Security Trust Fund). When there are no longer deployments, net interest payments or debt, the surtax would sunset. This would encourage paying it back faster so the children of the rich no longer have to pay so much. Even if it is never enacted, this plan would demonstrate to wealthier taxpayers that their kids are on the hook for the debt, not the vast majority of families.

    Look at it this way. The national debt is possible because of progressive income taxation. The liability for repayment, therefore, is a function of that tax. The Gross Debt (we have to pay back trust funds to) is $19 Trillion. Income Tax revenue is roughly $1.8 Trillion per year. That means for for every dollar you pay in taxes, you owe $10.55 in debt. People who pay nothing owe nothing. People who pay tens of thousands of dollars a year owe hundreds of thousands. The answer is not making the poor pay more or giving them less benefits, either only slows the economy. Rich people must pay more and do it faster. My child is becoming a social worker, although she was going to be an artist. Don’t look to her to pay off the debt. Trump’s children and grandchildren are the ones on the hook unless their parents step up an pay more. How’s that for incentive?


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