Both Parties Scramble
To Avoid Responsibility For AMT Bomb
The Wall Street Journal Article below is the Republican
spin on the AMT. Both parties are scrambling to avoid
blame. Of course, Republicans made no effort to repeal
AMT while they controlled congress and the white house.
The truth is neither party in Washington wants to give
up the revenue. But, this article is good reading because
it contains important and accurate information about
the AMT despite its partisan spin.
The Wall Street Journal
February 23, 2007
As tax season nears, Democrats in Congress are discovering
they have an urgent political bomb to defuse -- the
alternative minimum tax. The AMT already hits four million
Americans, and without new legislation this year it
will explode in the pocketbooks of 23 million taxpayers
come April 15, 2008.
What's amazing is that many Democrats and reporters
are trying to blame this looming tax increase on the
2001-2003 tax cuts. See if you can follow their argument:
Taxpayers are obliged to pay the higher of their tax
bill under either the regular IRS code or the AMT. And
because the tax cuts reduced the regular income tax
of the average family by $2,000 a year, more middle-class
families are being bounced to the AMT system. Ergo,
it's all President Bush's fault.
This logic requires overlooking that a taxpayer's bill
under the AMT is still lower than it would have been
without the tax cuts. But never mind: The political
game here is to use the AMT as an excuse to justify
repealing the Bush tax cuts.
In reality, the AMT is one more liberal monster that
was created in the name of soaking the rich but has
now come back to swallow the middle class. Democrats
created the AMT in 1969, amid a political frenzy to
capture a mere 21 millionaires who had paid nothing.
And the politician most responsible for the AMT's relentless
expansion in recent years is none other than William
Jefferson Clinton.
Remember the 1993 tax hike that was supposed to fall
only on the rich? In addition to raising gas taxes and
Medicare payroll taxes and income tax rates, the Democratic
Congress that year also raised the AMT: from a 24% flat
rate to a dual tax rate of 26% on AMT income up to $175,000
and 28% on AMT income above that amount.
It's true that the 1993 bill slightly increased the
AMT's family income exemption, but Democrats refused
to index those exemptions for inflation. So the combination
of the higher rates and the failure to index for inflation
has caught more and more middle-class taxpayers in the
AMT's maw. From 1992 to 2002, this Clinton stealth tax
hike increased sixfold the number of filers paying the
AMT, to nearly two million from 300,000.
A Joint Tax Committee (JTC) analysis requested last
year by Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa shows that
about 11 million more Americans will have to pay the
AMT next year thanks to the higher post-1993 AMT rates.
The House Ways and Means Committee calculates that if
you live in a high-tax state (such as California or
New York) and have two or more kids, you're very likely
to be hit with the AMT this year even if your income
is as low as $75,000.
All of which means that if Democrats really want to
spare Joe Lunchbucket from the AMT, the cleanest solution
is to repeal the Clinton AMT rate hikes. The nearby
chart, prepared by the American Shareholders Association
based on Joint Tax data, compares the number of filers
who will be hit by the AMT under current law and what
would happen if the AMT rate was moved back to the pre-Clinton
24% and the exemption was indexed for inflation at the
2005 level of $40,250 ($58,000 for a joint return).
Going back to the pre-Clinton rates would leave only
about 2.6 million tax filers subject to an AMT penalty
next year instead of 23 million under current law.
The estimated "cost" of this fix to the Treasury
over 10 years would be some $632 billion, which is money
Democrats in Congress would prefer to spend. But as
Senator Grassley notes: "This tax was never meant
to tax the middle class, so why should we count it as
a revenue loss when we make sure they don't have to
pay it?"
There's a larger policy lesson to keep in mind as the
debate unfolds over both the AMT and the looming expiration
of the Bush tax cuts in 2010: Beware politicians who
say they only want to tax the rich. Sooner or later
their tax schemes will soak the middle class because
that's where the real money is. Regarding the AMT, Democrats
are now saying they'll be glad to provide AMT relief
for the middle class but they'll have to raise taxes
on CEOs and other high-income Americans to do it. Where
have we heard that one before?
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