Patching the AMT…Again
The AMT patch is the modern legislative issue that will not go away. Every year the patch expires; every year members of Congress across the political spectrum decry the threat of a massive tax hike on unwary taxpayers if Congress does not extend the patch; and every year Democrats insist on tax increases to offset the "cost" of the patch. Fortunately, the argument annually withers in the face of the commonsense proposition that preventing a tax hike is not a cut and therefore does not necessitate an offsetting tax increase. To their credit, the authors of the Senate tax bill did not try to use the AMT patch extension as an excuse to raise taxes.[2]
Extending Federal Tax Provisions Without Tax Hikes
Long before the AMT patch was an issue, lawmakers raised the banner of fiscal discipline to justify raising taxes as a means of maintaining current tax policy. Such practice usually took the form of legislation extending provisions known as "tax extenders," including such popular provisions as the R&D tax credit and the low-income housing tax credit. Unfortunately, the Senate tax extenders bill continues this practice.
As with any legislation of this scope, some of the extensions are appropriate while others should be discarded. However, in either event, these tax extensions are not new laws and should not be treated as such. Provisions that prevent tax hikes and that are retained should not have to be "paid for," while those that are eliminated should be considered as tax increases.
Three major tax hikes are included in the bill. Whatever the tax policy merits of these tax hikes, the purported rationale for the tax increase should not be lost. If Congress decides these provisions are appropriate as an "offset," then the revenue raised should be used to offset actual tax cuts rather than extensions of current law. Anything else would represent further expansion of government as well as a tax increase.
In the past, as well as the present, and whether in regard to the AMT patch or other extenders, fiscal discipline does not require raising taxes to prevent a tax hike.
Good Policy, Not a Good Show
Congress should make the AMT patch permanent until such time as it can engage in a broader review of tax policy that will eliminate the AMT altogether. Congress should review the scores of other extenders, make those that are deemed good policy permanent and allow the balance to lapse. If it believes the proposed revenue raisers are appropriate, Congress should use the resulting revenues and those from any lapsed extenders to offset the costs of additional tax cuts. The McConnell/Grassley extenders bill would be a good place to start.
Fiscal discipline is important to the long-term health of the economy. Real fiscal discipline—restraining spending—would be a welcome change for this Congress. At the very least, however, Congress should not attempt to raise taxes while maintaining current tax law under the guise of a faux fiscal discipline. At a time of rising energy and food prices the American taxpayer does not need rising taxes too. Regardless of what label the Democrat leadership applies, a tax increase is still a tax increase.
J. D. Foster, Ph.D., is Norman B. Ture Senior Fellow in the Economics of Fiscal Policy in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation. Stephen Keen is Research Assistant, in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation