海角大神

Hey, remember Romney's tax plan?

Amid all of the fuss over Cain's 9-9-9 plan and Perry's massive cuts, Romney's more conventional tax plan has largely flown under the radar. That's exactly the way he wants it.

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Charlie Neibergall/AP
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks during a campaign stop at Giese Manufacturing in Dubuque, Iowa. Romney's cautious tax plan would do little more than tinker around the edges of the current law, Gleckman argues.

I鈥檝e been reviewing the tax plans of the major Republican presidential hopefuls and am struck at how conventional聽Mitt Romney鈥檚 is.聽 While Herman Cain wants to replace the entire federal tax code with his and聽Rick聽Perry favors a , Romney would do little more than tinker around the edges of the current law. In short, he seems聽pretty聽happy with the individual tax code while he supports more business tax cuts.聽 聽

You can see how all the GOP candidates line up in a nice put together by my Tax Policy Center colleagues. 聽And looking at them in one place really is eye opening. 聽While Cain and Perry would effectively blow up the current code (Perry would still let you pay under the existing聽system for a few more years), Romney would essentially keep it.

With all the attention garnered by Perry and Cain, Romney鈥檚 cautious has floated under the radar. And that is, I suspect, exactly where he prefers it.

For individuals, Romney would extend the 2001/2003/2010 tax law. He promises to lower ordinary income tax rates鈥攂ut to unspecified levels at some unidentified time in the future. He鈥檇 keep refundable credits such as the Earned Income Credit and Child Credit that provide income support for low-wage workers but have come under stiff criticism from some in the GOP.

He鈥檇 eliminate taxes on capital gains and dividends, but only for those making $200,000 or less.聽And Romney is silent on what he鈥檇 do about the Alternative Minimum Tax or individual deductions, credits, and exclusions. By contrast, both Cain and Perry would聽dump the AMT and sharply scale back individual tax subsidies.

Romney is more ambitious when it comes to corporations. He鈥檇 cut their rate to 25 percent from the current top rate of 35 percent, add a new temporary investment tax credit and allow firms to continue to fully write off the cost of capital investments in the year they make them. 聽He doesn鈥檛 say how all this would work, but allowing firms full expensing, adding an investment credit, and letting them continue to take an interest deduction all on the same equipment would result in massive subsidies on capital purchases.

These corporate tax cuts would also dramatically increase the deficit. Romney says he鈥檇 end some business tax breaks but doesn鈥檛 say how or when. He also promises to move to a territorial system, where only income earned in the U.S. would be subject to U.S. corporate income tax. But again he provides no details.

Is this a winning political hand? Romney, who appears to have聽the inside track to the GOP nomination, is betting that he can win the nod without proposing the kind of hot-button reforms聽Perry and Cain have offered. That would be a decided advantage in a general election race, where many independents may recoil from the aggressive Perry or Cain plans.

The question is whether one of his more conservative opponents can do well enough in the coming months to force him to embrace something like a flat tax.

Romney clearly doesn鈥檛 want to do it. It will be interesting to see if he has to.聽

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