http://www.taxjusticeblog.org/archive/2014/12/ctj_report_extenders_bill_is_a.php#.VIGy_Yd8Fwl
A new report
from Citizens for Tax Justice explains that while the President
deserves credit for stopping a much bigger corporate giveaway, even the
$42 billion bill is an absurd waste of money from a Congress that has
been unable to find a way to fund basic public investments like
highways and bridges.
Here are just a few of the problems with H.R. 5771:
■ Most of the tax breaks fail to achieve any desirable policy goals.
For example, they include bonus depreciation breaks for investments in
equipment that the Congressional Research Service have found to be a
“relatively ineffective tool for stimulating the economy, a tax credit
for research defined so loosely that it includes the work soft drink
companies put into developing new flavors, and a tax break that allows
General Electric to do financial business offshore without paying U.S.
taxes on the profits.
■ The tax breaks cannot possibly be effective in encouraging
businesses to do anything because they are almost entirely retroactive.
The tax breaks actually expired at the end of 2013 and this bill will
extend them (almost entirely retroactively) through 2014. These tax
provisions are supposedly justified as incentives for companies to do
things Congress thinks are desirable, like investing in equipment or
research, but that justification makes no sense when tax breaks are
provided to businesses for things they have done in the past.
■ The bill increases the deficit by $42 billion to provide
tax breaks that mostly benefit businesses, even after members of
Congress have refused to enact any measure that helps working people
unless the costs are offset. The measures that Congress
refused to enact without offsets include everything from creating jobs
by funding highway projects to extending emergency unemployment
benefits.
No comments:
Post a Comment