Yay for the holiday season; it's about time. This has been a tough last couple of months in some ways, for me as for our country.
In terms of my professional activities, my forthcoming book, LITERATURE AND INEQUALITY: Nine Perspectives from the Napoleonic Era Through the First Gilded Age, remains on-track for April 2020 publication by the Anthem Press. Copy-editing has begun.
In mid-January, I'll be traveling to Singapore to give a lecture at the NUS Faculty of Law as Sat Pal Khattar Visiting Professor of Tax Law. It will concern my work in progress, Digital Services Taxes and the Broader Shift From Determining the Source of Income to Taxing Location-Specific Rents. A final version of the piece will then appear in the Singapore Journal of Legal Studies. The lecture time is long enough that I'm preparing, and will post here, significantly longer and fuller slides than I have posted upon giving briefer talks concerning the piece.
My new article in process is well underway, albeit perhaps ready for seasonal hiatus. Its current working title is What Are Minimum Taxes, and Why Might One Favor or Disfavor Them? It will discuss, inter alia, what one might call the "Mortimer Adler" problem with using minimum taxes, how minimum taxes might be defined (and why minimum tax-ness might matter), and it will discuss in this regard institutional manifestations that include at least the following:
(1) the AMT,
(2) standalone versus minimum tax structure for taxing public companies' reported financial statement income, with reference to the 1987-1989 AMT preference that was based on book income,
(3) the BEAT,
(4) GILTI (along with worldwide/foreign tax credit systems that are structurally similar, albeit typically not called minimum taxes if they tax foreign source income at the full domestic rate), and
(5) other global minimum taxes, such as the OECD's Pillar Two proposal.
Unfair but balanced commentary on tax and budget policy, contemporary U.S. politics and culture, and whatever else happens to come up
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Thursday, December 05, 2019
Taxing corporate book income: minimum tax vs. add-on tax
Vice President Biden has just proposed a 15% corporate minimum tax based on companies' financial statement accounting income (aka, book income) above a large threshold. By contrast, Senator Warren is proposing a 7% add-on or additional tax on book income above the threshold. The difference is that the latter would be payable in all events, while the former would be payable only to the extent in excess of regular taxable income (albeit, with multi-year smoothing provisions).
Leaving aside perhaps the biggest issue here, which pertains to taxing book income or not, the contrast between them raises the classic old issue of minimum taxes versus separate add-on taxes. I have begin writing about this issue more generally (including in my analysis the US experience with the individual and corporate AMTS, as well as global minimum taxes such as GILTI and the OECD Pillar Two Globe proposal. But it also goes way back for me. The first article I published after entering academe in 1987 was entitled something like "Perception, Reality, and Strategy: The New Alternative Minimum Tax." I published it in Taxes Magazine so I could get it out fast, although in style and substance it was more like a Tax Law Review article.
I am not, however, writing the new article within a time frame that's aimed at participating in the current Democratic campaign debate. I'm more interested in getting a general analysis out there that I think is presently lacking, although lots of experts have a decent grasp on some of the main points.
Leaving aside perhaps the biggest issue here, which pertains to taxing book income or not, the contrast between them raises the classic old issue of minimum taxes versus separate add-on taxes. I have begin writing about this issue more generally (including in my analysis the US experience with the individual and corporate AMTS, as well as global minimum taxes such as GILTI and the OECD Pillar Two Globe proposal. But it also goes way back for me. The first article I published after entering academe in 1987 was entitled something like "Perception, Reality, and Strategy: The New Alternative Minimum Tax." I published it in Taxes Magazine so I could get it out fast, although in style and substance it was more like a Tax Law Review article.
I am not, however, writing the new article within a time frame that's aimed at participating in the current Democratic campaign debate. I'm more interested in getting a general analysis out there that I think is presently lacking, although lots of experts have a decent grasp on some of the main points.
Wednesday, December 04, 2019
Final NYU Tax Policy Colloquium session for fall 2019
Yesterday at the colloquium, after marking the
completion of my 25th year co-running the thing, we discussed Josh Blank’s and
Ari Glogower’s Progressive Tax Procedure. This is still an early draft of an
ambitious project, hence plenty of opportunities to discuss the way forward.
(Not presented when we discuss, as sometimes happens, recently published
papers.)
Each of the three words in the title could be interrogated a
bit. However, the basic idea is that procedural rules in the federal income tax
– for example, concerning statutes of limitation, penalty rules, and standards
of care in taking reporting positions – might vary with the income or wealth of
the taxpayer. Audit rates are also in the ballpark, although to what extent
within scope remains unclear. The clearest contrast, although here I seem to
have begun interrogating the third word in the title, lies between procedural
and “substantive “ rules – establishing, for example the tax rate and base.
“Progressive” raises numerous definitional issues, but the
broader category might be called “means-based.” Suppose you want average or
effective or statutory or marginal rates to rise with the taxpayer’s income.
Then you favor income tax progressivity as defined or measured one way or
another, but the broader point is that you favor a positive relationship
between the rate of particular interest to you and the taxpayer’s overall
income (which is a measure of the taxpayer’s means).
In that example, we also know how to define a regressive tax
system. The rate of chosen interest goes south rather than north, with a
perfectly flat tax standing in between them as the benchmark of a means-neutral
system so far as these aspects are defined. (Of course, in a flat rate tax
system, those with higher income still pay more overall tax, but the rate that
one is focusing on, is distinct from overall liability, doesn’t vary with the
measure of means.)
“Progressive tax procedure” therefore implies that item one
is looking at grow less favorable in some way as the overall measure of the
taxpayer’s means increases. Illustrative examples that the paper is at least
willing to contemplate might involve, for example, having penalty rates go up
as a percentage of the underpaid tax liability, statutes of limitation
increase, or standards of taxpayer care to avoid penalties grow more demanding,
as the taxpayer’s income (or, say, wealth, if a measure of that was available)
increases.
Having audit rates rise with income would be within the
paper’s scope if that qualifies as “procedure,” which remains to be determined
by the authors. This helps raise the point that once is talking about
means-based tax procedure, without specifying as yet that it might be
progressive, one might be motivated, not just by distributional preferences,
but also the question of what information is relevant to tax administration.
For example, supposed that the IRS’s information audits found that the amount
of one’s income (at the start of the audit, or at the end) was informative
regarding the likely revenue yield from a given audit. We know, of course, that
the IRS must be looking at such things as whether, say, cash businesses or
those in particular industries offer greater audit yields, or perhaps returns
with large vs. small charitable contributions of a given type. If they find
that something relating to the taxpayer’s overall means is also relevant to
expected audit yield, one could ask (among other questions) whether using or
ignoring this information would be, not only the better approach all things
considered, but even the more “neutral” one, if one was attempting to define
and apply such a benchmark. But while I suspect that a consistently applied
audit yield metric would result in a significant upward shift, along the income
scale, in who is audited, it wouldn’t necessarily be “progressive” all the
time. E.g., suppose EITC claimants tend to yield greater audit yield than those
earning above the phase-out. Or suppose there is more audit yield from the
merely rich in the 99.0 to 99.5% percentile, than from those at the very top.
Then one’s audit yield strategy wouldn’t be “progressive” at all margins, even
when it was means-based.
This distinction can be an important one – looking at
“means” because it has relevant informational content wholly apart from one’s
distributional policy preferences, vs. because it is itself a topic of interest
under one’s distributional preferences.
A further distinction to have in mind here lies between
formal and substantive means-based variation in tax procedural rules. You know
the old gag: “The law, in its majesty, forbids the rich and poor alike to sleep
under bridges.” An opposite version of the same thing is FATCA, requiring
information reporting about US taxpayers’ foreign bank accounts. As between
full-time U.S. residents, this has progressive impact, at least to a degree,
because you have to be at a certain level of wealth and/or income before one
starts availing oneself of foreign bank accounts. (But perhaps it tapers down
at some point towards the top? And of course for U.S. taxpayers who spend
enough time abroad to need local banking outside the country, FATCA looms even
if their resources are decidedly modest.) Likewise, if one applies particular
penalties above a flat dollar amount of overall tax liability shortfall, or if
one disfavors the use of tax advisor opinions as penalty shields, the rule even
if formally neutral will have upwards-tilting effects.
In thinking about the various approaches that the paper puts
in play, both the Kaplow-Shavell work on restricting distribution policy to the
“tax system” and the Kaplow work on the social value of determining income (or
whatever) accurately offer important orienting devices. Rules that might be
described as implementing progressive tax procedure are contrary to the
Kaplow-Shavell approach if they are used to increase the overall progressivity
of the tax system – except insofar as by, say, reducing tax avoidance
opportunities they affect optimal rates. But if they are using means-based
information that is relevant to efficient implementation, the case is
different. The point here isn’t to insist on Kaplow-Shavell conformity, as
that’s a live issue under debate, but it’s useful for situating and
understanding the claims.
And here’s where “accuracy” as discussed by Kaplow and
others may enter the analysis. Suppose we used means-based, whether or not
progressive, tax procedural rules to change the taxation of rich people in the
following way. E.g., suppose that initially half were paying tax at a 40%
effective rate and others at a 20% rate, due to tax avoidance opportunities
available disproportionately to the latter. Then we used tax procedural rules,
such as cutting back on the use of penalty shield tax opinions, or more broadly
(whether or not within the term’s scope) by increasing audits of high-income taxpayers.
One might think of the shift as being distributionally neutral, in an aggregate
group sense, if now all the rich paid 30%, but for multiple reasons this might
now be a better system (leaving aside the costs of getting there). Whereas, if
we got all of them up to 40%, the system would now apparently be more accurate,
but it would also be more progressive – which might be fine, but muddies the
waters a bit regarding why we might favor (if we did) the tax procedural
changes that brought about this new state of affairs. In Kaplow terms, a key
question in the now-all-30% scenario would be measuring the benefit vs. the
cost (if positive) of the greater accuracy – we obviously wouldn’t be willing
to spend infinite resources in order to measure everyone’s income accurately
and assure the uniformly “correct” application of statutory tax rates.
My point here is simply that this helps to demarcate the
different issues raised by means-based tax procedure that the paper will be
exploring as it develops.
Tuesday, December 03, 2019
NYU Tax Policy Colloquium: 25 years in the bank!
Today was the final session of my 25th Tax Policy Colloquium at NYU. The occasion was honored by kind people with a poster, card, cake, and short speech (actually, that was impromptu & by me). This photo shows me reenacting the candle blow-out (2 + 5 = 7 in one blow, just like the Little Tailor from Grimm's Fairy Tales). Room was fairly full of people, but they backed off for the photo op.
Monday, December 02, 2019
Modestly revised paper draft
I have revised, although this time fairly modestly, the SSRN-posted version of my article on multinational rents or quasi-rents, the source and value creation concepts, and digital service taxes as an exemplar of where international tax policy may more generally be heading.
You can find the revised version here.
For now I've kept "Digital Services Taxes" as the first 3 words in the title, though this risks over-stating the extent to which the paper is actually about them as such. They remain a relevant piece of the paper's analysis, and (at least so far) I couldn't come up with a good title that didn't start by referencing them.
You can find the revised version here.
For now I've kept "Digital Services Taxes" as the first 3 words in the title, though this risks over-stating the extent to which the paper is actually about them as such. They remain a relevant piece of the paper's analysis, and (at least so far) I couldn't come up with a good title that didn't start by referencing them.