Tax Reform

Asset Building News Week, April 15-19

  • By
  • Hannah Emple
April 19, 2013
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The Asset Building News Week is a weekly Friday feature on The Ladder, the Asset Building Program blog, designed to help readers keep up with news and developments in the asset building field. This week's topics include housing, unemployment, financial products, taxes, and inequality.

Social Contract Budgeting: Prescriptions from Economics and History

  • By Peter Lindert, University of California - Davis
December 17, 2012

If there is to be any durable hope for a social contract that transcends left-right partisanship, that contract must rest upon a majority consensus about policies that are efficient, fair, and sustainable. Once the smoke has cleared from this November’s battle over the role of government, what will endure are several policy prescriptions kept alive by an objective reading of economic history and a general consensus among economists.

Tax Reform That Works: Building a Solid Fiscal Foundation with a VAT

  • By Bruce Bartlett, Author, The Benefit and the Burden: Tax Reform -- Why We Need It and What It Will Take
November 29, 2012

Tax reform is like the weather – everyone talks about it, but no one ever does anything about it. But unlike inclement weather, the problems of the tax system don’t go away; they continue to fester and compound. Today there are a number of unpleasant trends in the federal tax system that are crying out for attention:

ALC 2012: The Impact of the Great Recession on Low-Income Communities and Communities of Color

  • By
  • Vishnu Sridharan
October 2, 2012
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Though the Assets Learning Conference is now more than a week past, one session that has stuck with me dealt with The Great Recession and its Impact on Wealth in Low-Income Communities and Communities of Color. Through deftly interwoven presentations from the Urban Institute, Woodstock Institute, and Ohio State University (moderated by the U.S.

Event Summary: Jobs are Not Enough

  • By
  • Haley Eagon
July 12, 2012
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The Asset Building Program hosted an event Wednesday, July 11 to release the July/August issue of the Washington Monthly. The issue focuses on the importance and applicability of the asset building agenda in the lives of all Americans. Utilizing the magazine's focus as a frame for the event, our panelists tackled critical themes such as savings as a path to higher education, the importance of life-long savings mechanisms, the role of federal policies in promoting prosperity, and a growing political divide between young and old Americans.

Death to Tuition Tax Breaks?

  • By
  • Rachel Fishman
July 5, 2012
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This post first appeared on HigherEdJobs as part of their iFocus feature.

By 2018, nearly two-thirds of American jobs will require a postsecondary credential.While our economic success as a nation depends on getting millions more people to and through college, college has never been so expensive. As prices go up and state support dwindles, students are forced to bear a larger share of college costs. Instead of shoring up the resources meant to help low-income students, the federal government is pouring more money into financial aid programs that disproportionately help middle- and upper-income students who would have gone to college anyway. 

The success of low- and moderate-income students often hinges on their ability to receive financial aid, especially grant aid like the Pell Grant. If we don't overhaul our federal financial aid programs to make them sustainable and better targeted toward low- and moderate-income students, we risk never being able to fulfill our nation's labor market needs. And when it comes to finding the resources needed to revamp the federal financial aid program, the lowest hanging fruit, ripe for the picking, are the higher education tax credits and deductions. 

The main problem with higher education tax benefits, like the American Opportunity Tax Credit (AOTC) and the Student Loan Interest Deduction, is that they are not effectively directed toward the students who most need them. According to a recent report by Education Sector, tax filers earning more than $75,000 were two-and-a-half times more likely to receive AOTC benefits than those earning less than $25,000. In addition, millions of tax filers lack the financial literacy required to figure out if they are eligible for one of the higher education tax credits and how to best maximize their benefit. 

In 2009 alone, the federal government spent $14.7 billion on these tax credits that overly benefit upper- and middle-income families. Since higher education is not only a private good, this is both a bad education and economic policy. Federal financial aid programs were developed in part to make a college degree attainable for lower- and moderate-income students since the return on investment to the nation is high. A college education leads to higher earnings resulting in more tax revenues. The magnitude of this effect is astonishing - a four-year-equivalent degree gives the government $471,000 more in income, payroll, property, and sales tax revenue. 

The government could roll back the thresholds of these tax benefits to ensure they are better targeted to low- and middle-income families, but that would do nothing to reduce the complexity that prevents millions of these families - usually the least savvy and most needy - from claiming them. Instead, the government needs to get rid of them - the American Opportunity, Lifetime Learning, and Hope tax credits, plus both the Tuition and Fees, and Student Loan Interest deductions. With the savings, we could better target students who need the most financial aid help by restructuring and rethinking federal aid programs. 

This will be an uphill battle since the tax credits poll well. But in an age of shrinking resources, increasing college costs, and an urgent need to get more students to and through college, we have to put aside popular but poorly-targeted policies in order to help those who wouldn't otherwise attend college, go and succeed.

Tax Day 2012: Two Views

  • By
  • Reid Cramer,
  • New America Foundation
April 17, 2012 |

For over 26 million American households, tax day is a relief. Thanks to the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), filing taxes triggers a refund that may be the largest lump sum of cash these families receive all year. Unfortunately, for many other families, it’s just another day. One in four who qualify for the EITC don’t file, and they don’t benefit from what’s really the country’s largest anti-poverty policy effort—currently at over $55 billion. For those with low-incomes and few resources, their tax refund is a welcomed infusion of cash that can be used to manage their poor finances.

What My Television Says About Our Broken Tax Code

  • By
  • Rachel Black,
  • New America Foundation
April 16, 2012 |

My television is 100-pound behemoth from an era when Seinfeld was still must-see TV. So, when a couple of friends offered to sell my husband and me their "old" set a month ago—a svelte 32'' flat screen I could have carried home without getting winded—we jumped at the chance.

We immediately boasted about our purchase to my in-laws. My former banker father-in-law reminded me that, as a bonus, we could deduct the cost of the ancient set from our taxes after we donated it.

America’s Pent-Up Demand

  • By
  • Patrick C. Doherty,
  • New America Foundation
March 26, 2012

Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is looking hard for demand. Without a “more-rapid expansion of production and demand from producers and consumers,” the Fed chairman does not see the recent employment gains as “sustainable.” That’s an understatement.

Fix the Inequality Gap: Bloomberg Businessweek Opening Remarks

  • By
  • Charles Kenny,
  • New America Foundation
March 8, 2012 |

On Feb. 29 the World Bank announced that the proportion of the planet’s population living in absolute poverty -- on less than $1.25 a day -- had halved from 1990 to 2010. That rate of poverty reduction is unprecedented, driven by rapid rates of economic growth in poor countries from China to Ghana.

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