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Tax-exempt Olympic medals? That's silly.

The idea that Olympic medals should be tax-exempt is one of the few things Republicans and Democrats can agree on. And they're both wrong.

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Darren Whiteside/Reuters/File
Team USA celebrate at the victory ceremony after winning the gold medal at the women's eight finals rowing event during the London 2012 Olympic Games Last week. Gleckman argues that Olympics earnings should be taxed like any other income.

President Obama and conservative GOP senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) agree: Olympic medals and the cash awards that go with them should be tax-exempt. This is the dumbest idea of the summer鈥攁nd in our overheated campaign season, that鈥檚 saying something.

The idea seems to have originated with anti-tax advocate Grover Norquist. Rubio instantly turned Norquist鈥檚 into a . By yesterday, Obama had his spokesman join in the , perhaps hoping that a bit of the game鈥檚 nationalistic enthusiasm聽would rub off of his presidential campaign.

What鈥檚 going on here? U.S. athletes who win their competitions get two forms of direct compensation. First, of course, is their medal鈥攇old, silver, or bronze. The commodity value of the hardware is very modest, ranging from perhaps $700 for gold to about $5 for bronze. Second, the U.S. Olympic Committee (not the U.S. government) pays聽a cash bonus of $25,000 for gold, $15,000 for silver, and $10,000 for bronze. Those winnings聽are taxable just like any other income. The Rubio bill would make them tax-exempt. If you want to know more, PolitiFact has a nice, more detailed .

I suspect much of the support for this silly idea is based on the mostly-outdated myth of the self-sacrificing amateur athlete who gives up all in the Olympic spirit. Chariots of Fire and all that.

But the dons who run the Olympics have let professionals compete for more than 40 years. As a result, many of those who would benefit from this tax cut are as far from amateurs as one could imagine. 聽LeBron James, for instance, made $57 million last year in salary and endorsements. Kobe Bryant made $52 million. Michael Phelps made $10 million. Does BronBron聽really need an $8,700 tax cut? Seriously?

And even those winners who have not yet cashed in will do so soon enough. As Gabby Douglas is about to learn, a gold medal and a nice smile is worth untold bucks on Madison Ave.

Are there still U.S. athletes who compete聽for the love of their sport, and make great personal and financial sacrifices to participate in the Olympics? Absolutely. 聽Many聽medal-quality athletes now have sponsors who pay most of their expenses but some, especially those in minor sports, must work temporary or part-time jobs to pay the rent while training.

The thing is, those self-sacrificing athletes won鈥檛 be helped very much by this new bill. A single person whose only income is her $25,000 cash award and who has no deductions would owe about $1,900 in . But, of course, a world-class athlete would likely have many deductible expenses鈥攆or coaching, travel, equipment and the like. It is not unreasonable to suspect that in the real world, many of those low-income non-professional athletes already owe little or no tax on their Olympic cash bonus.

Let鈥檚 not kid ourselves, the Olympics is聽big business.聽Paying athletes performance bonuses for winning medals is no less commercial than anything else the Olympic bosses do. But why this extra cash should be tax-free escapes me. At least hedge fund operators have to pay capital gains taxes on their bonuses.

As my colleague Eric Toder reminds me, there once was a time when this sort of special tax treatment was slipped into revenue bills by high-paid lobbyists in the dark of night. Now, the code has been so corrupted that pols propose this junk without even being asked. For that, I suppose, they deserve the gold medal of stupid tax tricks. 聽聽

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