On June 8, a House Ways and Means subcommittee held a hearing on Framework for Evaluating Certain Expiring Tax Provisions. I think that is a good approach to the topic of dealing with the roughly 60 provisions that expired at the end of 2011 (many of which expire on a regular basis), as well as the 40+ that expire at the end of 2012. I think all of the provisions are ones that reduce government collections (tax cuts). (See this Joint Committee on Taxation report for a list of the expiring tax provisions.)
A framework to evaluate them, if consistently used, is a logical way to address the question of which should expire as their purpose is no longer needed, which should be extended and of those extended, should it be permanently or temporarily. Some of the expiring provisions, such as the Social Security tax cut for employees and self-employed individuals was for economic stimulus. Thus, it should not be renewed. Others, such as the research tax credit, are temporary because lawmakers don't find permanent ways to pay for that tax cut. There are good policy reasons for a permanent research tax credit. They include that it will be more effective as a permanent provision rather than a temporary one. It is also disingenuous to keep renewing it rather than all in one effort finding the revenue to allow for a permanent research credit. I say disingenuous because when it is renewed, temporary revenue is found to pay for it and this is done over and over again (I think 13 times so far since the credit's first expiration in 1985).
At the June 8 hearing, the GAO suggested this evaluation framework:
GAO Testimony of June 8, 2012 |
I think that is a good set. I'd also add the need to evaluate whether the purpose of the provision is still pertinent (assuming it ever was). I'd also add that if it is determined that the provision should be extended, whether it should be temporary or permanent.
Another problem with expiring provisions is that they get a good amount of attention relative to permanent provisions of the law. Many state governments place sunsets on tax cuts to ensure that they do get regular review. I'd suggest that any new tax cuts have an expiration date and that a system be created to enable all of the over 200 tax cuts in the system get reviewed over the next 5 years. Both President Obama and Mitt Romney (as well as Congressman Camp) have called for reducing tax preferences (or they may call them loopholes or tax expenditures). So perhaps the review of all of them will occur in the next few years - that would be great for the tax system.
I suggest this reminder:
Tax expenditures should only be used and continued if they are an appropriate use of government resources and the best way to deliver the intended benefit.
I am going to work on testimony to submit for the written record; I'll post it here as well.
What would you suggest for your framework on how to evaluate expiring tax provisions?