One step Congress can take to avoid bringing Greece's fiscal problems home
Loading...
To avoid Greece-like fiscal woes, Congress needs to raise more revenue and cut spending. A value-added tax or a tax on carbon make economic sense, but implementing either could take years. Broadening the income tax base seems politically unrealistic, and Congress already upped tax rates to pay for the health care bill. One option for more revenue is a simplified Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).
The current AMT isn鈥檛 a minimum tax at all; it鈥檚 simply a parallel tax. Relative to the regular income tax, the AMT is a mostly flat rate applied to a different tax base with a large standard deduction. The result is that about upper-middle income taxpayers, often with children and living in high-tax states, pay more under this parallel tax system.
Congress could improve the current system by creating a true "minimum tax": Adjusted-gross income (AGI) above a certain threshold鈥攑erhaps the $200,000 for single filers and $250,000 for married filers that President Obama favors鈥攚ould be subject to a minimum tax rate. High-income taxpayers would lose the benefits of various deductions and credits if their average tax bill on AGI above the threshold fell below the minimum rate.
This plan would raise a substantial amount of revenue relative to current tax policy. Setting the minimum tax rate at 15 percent on AGI above the President鈥檚 high-income threshold (annually adjusted for inflation) would raise $165 billion over 10 years鈥攔oughly the amount the estate tax raises under current law. A 20 percent minimum tax rate would nearly triple the revenue gain to $480 billion, while a 25 percent rate would bring in five times as much鈥$832 billion. That鈥檚 real money. Congress could raise even more by expanding the AMT base to include certain types of exempt income, such as all interest on municipal bonds.
A simplified AMT would also ensure that all wealthy households pay a reasonable tax bill. Although the wealthy pay a lot in income taxes as a group, many pay relatively little. that among the richest 20 percent of tax units, about half paid less than 11 percent in income taxes. At least one-quarter paid less than 4 percent. A simplified minimum tax would hit those who pay little income tax, but protect those with an already-high tax burden.
As with all new taxes, there are drawbacks. Having two tax systems鈥攅ven if one is extraordinarily simple鈥攊s a complex and burdensome way to tax income. Limiting itemized deductions for AMT taxpayers could have some unintended consequences, such as in expensive markets or curtailing charitable giving. And if the minimum tax rate is set higher than the preferential rate on capital gains and dividends鈥攃urrently 15 percent鈥攕ome investors would see their after-tax returns diminish.
On the plus side, a simplified minimum tax would lower for scores of households, simplify the extraordinarily complex current AMT, and reinstate the primary reason for a minimum tax in the first place: to ensure that the wealthy pay a reasonable amount of tax. The total number of AMT taxpayers would plummet from over 4 million to less than 500,000. The simple minimum tax would be an economists' dream: a broad tax base with a low rate. Best of all, a simplified minimum tax would help us pay our bills. It鈥檚 worth considering.
------------------------------
海角大神 has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link above.