Making My Job Easier

A tax on tobacco is a regressive tax, and so equity-based opposition to a tobacco tax increase generally makes sense. However, if the tax will be used to fund an expansion of a fiscally progressive program, then it is possible that the net result will be progressive. I spent some time this morning compiling info that would give some indication of how the SCHIP expansion would shake out. Well, someone has already done the yeoman's work and crunched the numbers.

read in full

Ways and Means to Consider New Anti-Privatization Bill

Tomorrow, the House Ways and Means Committee will consider a new "good government" bill to end the IRS private debt collection program. Check out the bill here. It includes virtually the same language as HR 695- Rep. Steve Rothman (D-NJ) and Rep. Chris Van Hollen's (D-MD) bill to end the program. It also includes six other measures that tweak tax laws. Previous efforts to end the program have been caught up in procedural issues. At first blush, this new bill seems get around those problems- it has proper jurisdiction and probably wouldn't violate PAYGO.

read in full

A Virtuous Free Market? Lending Edition

The free-marketeers say that not only is the market more efficient than government in almost every way, it makes everyone virtuous. People become dependent on the state when it intervenes; the market promotes self-reliance and rewards hard work and discipline.

read in full

Executive Earmarks Obscuring Executive Branch Goals?

A story in The Hill today alleges that, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense (TCS), "senators have not claimed responsibility for at least $7.5 billion worth of projects approved by the Appropriations Committee." Per The Hill, the Committee claims that TCS "misinterpreted a host of appropriations requirements as earmarks... $6.5 billion requested by the Pentagon for the base realignment and closure program was considered 'undisclosed earmarks'."

read in full

The Absurdly Wealthy Tell It Like It Is

An interesting article from this weekend's New York Times that let's the wealthy share their views on why they're so rich. Other very wealthy men in the new Gilded Age talk of themselves as having a flair for business not unlike Derek Jeter's "unique talent" for baseball, as Leo J. Hindery Jr. put it. "I think there are people, including myself at certain times in my career," Mr. Hindery said, "who because of their uniqueness warrant whatever the market will bear."

read in full

JCT Issues Reports on SCHIP Financing

To fully offset a $35 billion expansion of SCHIP, the Senate Finance Committee has proposed raising tobacco taxes to about $1 per pack. The Joint Committee on Taxation released reports on the proposed revenue changes on Friday.
  • Estimated Revenue Effects Of The Revenue Provisions Related To The State Children's Health Insurance Program
  • Description Of The Revenue Provisions For Markup Of The State Children's Health Insurance Program
The five-year revenue generation from the proposed tax would be $35.7 billion, with a ten-year total of $71.1 billion.

read in full

Approps Update

  • Senate and House Appropriations Committees begin work this week marking up Agriculture
  • House Appropriations Committee will also take up Defense this week
Our story so far...

read in full

Earmark Spending Trend in the Math, Not the Headline

BNA has published a trendline comparison ($) of the number and the dollar amount of actual FY05 and proposed FY08 legislative earmarks and implies that, thus far in this year's process, numbers for both are heading down. "Of the five bills for which data had been posted July 13, earmark totals were mostly down in comparison with the 2005 figures," BNA says. We looked at BNA's findings and did some math, as follows:
  • Financial Services -- reduction in earmarks: 65 fewer; $150 million reduction in spending
  • Interior and Environment -- reductions: 1000 earmarks and $600 million

read in full

Dean Baker & Sen. Grassley vs. the Hysterics

I never thought of it this way, but economist Dean Baker, writing in Business Week, points out that the current tax rule permitting private equity fund managers to pax taxes on performance-based fee income for services at the capital gains rate is tantamount to a special tax rate for one profession. Despite the many areas of dispute among economists, virtually all of them would agree tax rates should not vary by occupation. In other words, we don't want to see one tax rate for firefighters, a different tax rate for schoolteachers, and a third tax rate for bookkeepers...

read in full

Bounty-Hunters Back on the Block

By a 15-14 vote, the Senate Appropriations Committee this week OK'ed the $21.8 billion Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill, H.R. 2829, over GOP complaints that it would essentially cut the IRS private debt collection program. The bill provides a mere $1 million for the program for FY 2008 -- down by about $250 million from FY 2007. Democrats question the program's efficacy and cost, and cite concerns about the potential for abusive practices stemming from bounty-hunters' private possession of citizens' financial information.

read in full

Pages

Subscribe to The Fine Print: blog posts from Center for Effective Government