The President wasn’t talking off the top of his head, though. In
attacking Romney’s proposal to cut tax rates across the board and scale
back some popular tax breaks, he and his campaign are citing a
new study
I also mentioned yesterday, from the Tax Policy Center, a non-partisan
Washington research institute. The study clearly says that Romney’s plan
would leave wealthy Americans considerably better off. According to the
three economists who authored the report, those lucky folks earning a
million dollars a year would end up taking home an extra eighty-seven
thousand dollars in income. By contrast, taxpayers earning under two
hundred thousand dollars a year would be hit with a tax increase of five
hundred dollars. And those figures are calculated on the assumption
that a Romney administration would eliminate many of the tax loopholes
enjoyed by the rich. If that didn’t happen, the report says, a Romney
Administration would have to take even more money from ordinary
Americans.
As you might expect, the Romney camp has dismissed the study as
a partisan attack,
calling it “another biased study from a former Obama staffer that
ignores critical parts of Governor Romney’s tax reform program, which
will help the middle class and promote faster economic growth.” The
former Obama staffer is Adam Looney, who worked on tax issues at the
Council of Economic Advisers, and who previously worked at the Federal
Reserve Board. In addition to contributing to Tax Policy Center studies,
he is currently the policy director for the Hamilton Project, a
research institute established by Robert Rubin. That marks him out as a
fiscally conservative Democrat, I suppose, but it hardly invalidates the
study. Another of its other authors, William Gale, once worked at the
White House for a Republican President: George H. W. Bush. The third
author, Samuel Brown, is another veteran of the Federal Reserve. All
three are acknowledged experts on the tax system.
The Tax Policy Center report stands on its own merits, which are
considerable. Perhaps the most notable thing about the criticisms from
the Romney campaign is that they don’t contain any refutations of any
individual figures. Conceivably, that is because Romney’s advisers don’t
want to get bogged down in a debate about fairness and equity. Much
more likely, it is because they couldn’t find anything in the report
that can be easily refuted. It’s yet another example of the Romney
campaign paying a political price for its pandering and opaqueness.
Romney only proposed such huge and irresponsible tax cuts in response to
criticisms from his rivals in the G.O.P. primary. Since then, he’s
refused to say in any detail how he’ll pay for them, which invites
others to speculate about their distributional consequences.
Essentially, the report is an accounting exercise. It takes all of the
economic pledges that Romney has made and examines what he would have to
do in order to meet them. For those of you who have forgotten, here’s
what the Mittster has promised: An indefinite extension of the 2001-2003
Bush tax cuts; a further twenty per cent cut in income-tax rates across
the board; the elimination of all taxes on investment income for
families earning less than two hundred thousand dollars a year; repeal
of the alternative minimum tax (A.M.T.); elimination of the estate tax; a
big reduction in the corporate-tax rate; and a repeal of the tax
increases included in the 2010 health-reform bill.
That’s quite a list. But Romney has also insisted that his tax reforms
would be revenue neutral. In order to pay for them, he says he would
scale back some popular tax deductions, such as the mortgage-interest
deduction and the deduction for employer-provided health care. That’s
where things get sticky. According to the Tax Policy Center study, in
2015 the proposed tax cuts would reduce federal revenues by four hundred
and fifty-six billion dollars, or about an eighth of the total. In
order to make up a gap that large, a Romney Administration would have to
eliminate a heck of a lot of loopholes.
Despite calls from many quarters, Romney hasn’t specified which tax
breaks and loopholes—for some mystifying reason, they are sometimes
called “tax expenditures”—he would tackle: the details of his plan would
be up for discussion with Congress, he says. Two things he has stated
are that he favors a progressive tax system and that he would mainly
target loopholes enjoyed by the rich. But here he runs into some
internal contradictions. As his own finances demonstrate, some of the
biggest tax benefits enjoyed by the rich come in the form of ultra-low
tax rates on investment income—capital gains and dividends—and
tax-favored savings accounts: I.R.A.s, Keogh accounts, 401(k) plans, and
so on. And these goodies, Romney has no plans to eliminate.
Once these things are taken off the table, the other benefits enjoyed by
the rich—deductions for mortgage interest payments, charitable giving,
health insurance, and so on—simply aren’t big enough to pay for his huge
tax cuts. In fact, even if Romney eliminated all of their other
loopholes and benefits—by, for instance, preventing them from claiming
any deductions for mortgage payments and charitable giving—then if he
were serious about revenue neutrality he would still have to target the
non-rich, scaling back some of their tax breaks, too. And once he
started down this path, many middle-class families would end up worse
off in net terms. Here is the the key passage in the report. (To make it
easier to read, wherever the phrase “tax expenditures” occurs, I have
substituted “tax breaks and loopholes.”)
The key intuition behind our central result is that,
because the total value of the available [tax breaks and loopholes]
(once [tax breaks and loopholes] for capital income are excluded) going
to high-income taxpayers is smaller than the tax cuts that would accrue
to high-income taxpayers, high-income taxpayers must necessarily face a
lower net tax burden. As a result, maintaining revenue neutrality
necessarily necessitates a shift in the tax burden of at least $86
billion away from high-income taxpayers onto lower and middle income
taxpayers. This is true even under the assumption that the maximum
amount of revenue possible is obtained from cutting [tax breaks and
loopholes] for high-income households.
There’s a lot more where that came from. The authors note that their
results almost certainly understate the regressive nature of Romney’s
proposals, “because it would be both administratively and politically
impractical to completely eliminate all tax expenditures only above a
given income threshold.” They also stress-tested their findings by
assuming that Romney’s tax cuts produced a higher rate of growth, as
conservative economists claim they would. Things didn’t change much:
“Even with implausibly large growth effects, revenue neutrality would
still require reductions in tax expenditures and would likely result in a
net tax increase for lower and middle income households and tax cuts
for high-income households.”
As I said earlier, the G.O.P. hasn’t contested any of these individual
findings. Romney’s real enemy isn’t the Tax Policy Center, the work of
which his campaign has praised in other contexts: it is the laws of
arithmetic. Like George W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, and other Republicans
before him, he has proposed a set of economic policies that don’t add
up. He doesn’t necessarily want to raise taxes on ordinary American
households, but if you take seriously all of things he has committed to
doing, that is where the logic leads.
Which raises another question that
I posed
a few days ago: Is Romney serious? I don’t think he is, and neither
does Howard Gleckman, the editor of the Tax Policy Center’s “TaxVox”
blog. In a
smart comment on this whole brouhaha, Gleckman writes:
Of course, Romney doesn’t have to raise taxes on the
middle-class. He could fix this problem with less ambitious rate cuts on
ordinary income, or by raising taxes on capital income. He could pay
for his initiative outside of the individual income tax system by
increasing corporate taxes—though he says he’d cut them. He could cut
spending even more deeply than he’s already promised, though that would
hurt low- and middle-income households too. Or he could just add to the
deficit.
Thus, the right question to ask Romney is not whether he wants to raise
taxes on the middle-class. The right question to ask is which of his
campaign promises he will abandon.
My guess is that it he would end up reneging on his commitment to
deficit reduction. Having repeatedly promised to cut income taxes by
“X”, a newly-elected President Romney could hardly turn around and say
he was doing less. Big spending cuts rarely materialize, whichever party
is in power. And Mitt surely isn’t about to offend his pals on Wall
Street by raising the tax on capital gains. As ever in Washington, the
easiest thing to do would be to borrow more money and let the deficit
rip.
Photograph by Jae C. Hong/AP/Corbis.
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