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Tax Law Meets Moore's Law (How Technology Outpaced the Tax Code)
Tax Foundation Message ^ | FR Post 2-24-02 | Executive director, Scott A. Hodge

Posted on 02/26/2002 6:58:47 AM PST by vannrox


"Foundation Message" October 2000

For each issue of Tax Features, the Tax Foundation's executive director, Scott A. Hodge, expresses his views on a timely topic in taxation.

Tax Law Meets Moore's Law

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A frequent complaint of corporate tax professionals is the difficulty in managing the realities of today ;s ever-changing technology with the rigid rules imposed by an industrial era tax code. How, for instance, do companies square the law of straight-line depreciation which requires them to depreciate high-tech equipment over five years with Moore s law, which states that the speed and power of a computer chip will double every eighteen months?

Individual taxpayers are also discovering that the tax code is out of step with the changing composition of the typical family. A soon to be released report by the U.S. Census Bureau shows that for the first time ever, the number of families with children in which both the husband and wife work is now greater than the number of single-earner families. Moreover, 55 percent of these dual-income couples had annual incomes of $50,000 and over, compared to 40 percent of the single-income couples.

The rise in dual-income couples likely explains the popularity of repealing the so-called marriage penalty. It may also explain why some polls show that voters are unmoved by the highly publicized charges that Governor George W. Bush s tax cut plan would deliver most of its benefits to the richest taxpayers. The fact is that many of these dual-income couples have actually entered tax brackets that were once reserved only for the rich.

The latest Internal Revenue Service data shows that the threshold for entering the top 25 percent of all taxpayers who pay about 83 percent of all income taxes is $50,607. Based on Bureau of Labor Statistics surveys of occupational earnings, an average-paid kindergarten teacher married to a entry-level firefighter would easily find themselves within the top 25 percent of taxpayers.

Should this school teacher become an assistant principal and the firefighter become an assistant fire chief, their combined income of $97,106 would easily surpass the $83,200 threshold to enter the top 10 percent of all taxpayers. While folks in these professions may never reach the $269,496 in earnings it would take to put them into the top one percent of taxpayers, they are not far from the $114,729 threshold that would put them into the top five percent.

Ironically, while these families are clearly in the "elite" of taxpayers, most if not all still consider themselves solidly middle class. So imagine their surprise when they learn that they earn more than the political definition of middle class and are thus ineligible for many of the targeted tax cuts promoted by candidates this year including most of the measures in Al Gores tax cut plan.

The proliferation of tax credits in recent years has also had the unintended consequence of increasing the number of families with Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) liabilities. According to the Joint Tax Committee (JTC), there are currently about one million taxpayers affected by the AMT, but that number is expected to rise to 10.5 million by 2010 under current law. JTC determined that Bushstax cut plan would increase the number of AMT-affected taxpayers by 16 percent by 2010. While JTC has not performed a similar analysis of the Vice Presidents tax plan, it is a certainty that Gores credit-laden plan would exacerbate the AMT problem to an even greater degree.

Estate tax repeal is another issue that has transended traditional class lines because of the rise of a new class the investor class. During this years congressional debate over Rep. Jennifer Dunns estate tax repeal legislation, many mainstream journalists marveled at the breadth of bi-partisan support she had garnered. But the old model doesnt American households now invested in the stock market, lawmakers are realizing that millions of average families (who vote) are reconsidering the fairness of the estate tax. Some obviously think they could save enough to be hit by the tax, and some may own a home whose appreciated value will put them over the top; but many have simply rethought the issue and concluded that the tax is unfair on principle.

Of course, the hallmark of the New Economy are the Internet entrepreneurs working out of their basements in the hopes of designing the next dot-com success story. But a recent General Accounting Office report indicates that these would-be e-millionaires are spending as much time complying with the tax code as they are writing computer code. GAO found that a small business can face up to 200 different IRS forms, schedules and requirements depending on how they organize, if they hire employees, and what kind of products or services they plan to offer.

Doubters will say that the near-term prospects of Washington enacting fundamental tax reform are slim to none even should a candidate who supports reform be elected. But the daily evidence that the current tax code is incompatible with the vibrant and dynamic New Economy may force Washington to stop talking about the problem and start solving it.




TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: taxreform

BINGO!


1 posted on 02/26/2002 6:58:47 AM PST by vannrox (MyEMail)
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To: vannrox
My observation is that the Bush team is as ill-equiped for the Information Age as the last regime.
2 posted on 02/26/2002 7:02:23 AM PST by JohnGalt
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To: vannrox
an average-paid kindergarten teacher married to a entry-level firefighter would easily find themselves within the top 25 percent of taxpayers.

Bears repeating.

3 posted on 02/26/2002 7:14:47 AM PST by Blood of Tyrants
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To: Blood of Tyrants
The grade school teachers in northern Illinois are making $80,000/year with 12 years experience.
4 posted on 02/26/2002 7:25:27 AM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: *Taxreform
Bump List
5 posted on 02/26/2002 8:13:09 AM PST by Free the USA
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