http://www.blackenterprise.com/yb/ybopen.asp?section=ybbf&story_id=78390689&ID=blackenterprise&p=0Panel Has Tax Reforms In Mind
2005-08-14
Albuquerque Journal
SANTA FE -- A presidential panel will offer several tax reform ideas next month, including the end to the unpopular alternative minimum tax, a panel member told a Santa Fe audience this week. But tax reform will die at the hands of special interests unless taxpayers demand change, said former Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Charles O. Rossotti in a speech to the New Mexico Tax Research Institute.
Any reform of the federal income tax system will require an end to some exemptions and tax breaks so taxes are collected at lower rates from more people and businesses, which will energize lobbyists to fight changes, Rossotti said. Public outrage helped change Internal Revenue Service behavior, beginning in 1997, when he was named commissioner, Rossotti said. "I think it's time the public rises up again and demand(s) a better tax system, not just a better IRS," he said. Rossotti said he could not describe in detail proposals the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform would provide President Bush in September.
But all panel members agreed at public hearings that the alternative minimum tax must go. The problem with ending the tax is that, without it, the U.S. Treasury will lose $1.3 trillion in revenue over the next 10 years, Rossotti said. "Tax simplification is really complicated," he said with a laugh. Rossotti said Bush put only two constraints on the panel's work: that nothing be done to discourage homeownership and charitable giving, and that proposals be revenue neutral.
The panel will offer a number of proposals, among them some form of flat tax and ideas for a consumption tax. Federal taxation is too complicated, costs too much to administer and is hard to enforce, Rossotti said. Rossotti was IRS commissioner from 1997 to 2002.
He is now a senior adviser to The Carlyle Group, a Washington, D.C., private equity investment firm.http://www.progressforamerica.com/1101-341.1101-011104G.htmlBush Appoints Panel to Study Tax-Code Change
01/10/2005
JOHN D. MCKINNON and ALEX KETO
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
President Bush laid the groundwork for overhauling the tax code, an effort that appears increasingly focused on simplifying rather than scrapping it.
Describing the overhaul as "an essential task," Mr. Bush tapped former Sens. Connie Mack, a Florida Republican, and John Breaux, a Louisiana Democrat, to be chairman and vice chairman of a bipartisan panel that will study the issue. The effort is aimed at making sure the tax code "encourages economic vitality and growth," Mr. Bush said. "It seems like to me the tax code today discourages economic vitality and growth when you spend billions of hours filling out the forms."
Asked if it were possible to accomplish both Bush administration goals of tax-code overhaul and a Social Security revamp at once, Mr. Breaux said it would be "a real challenge." Treasury Secretary John Snow said the administration is committed to putting tax overhaul on a "fast track." He said the tax panel is expected to report its recommendations by July 31 and the White House may be able to come up with new legislation as soon as the autumn. Still, it is widely expected that congressional debate will begin in earnest next year.
Other panelists include academic experts, business executives and former government officials. They are: William Frenzel, a former congressman and guest scholar at the Brookings Institution; Elizabeth Garrett, a law professor at the University of Southern California and counsel to former Democratic Sen. David Boren of Oklahoma; Edward Lazear, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and a professor at Stanford University's graduate school of business; former Federal Trade Commission Chairman Timothy Muris, now a professor at the George Mason School of Law; James Poterba, associate economics department head at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; former Internal Revenue Service Commissioner Charles O. Rossotti, a senior adviser to the Carlyle Group; and Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab.