Skip to main content
off the charts
POLICY INSIGHT
BEYOND THE NUMBERS

Feldstein’s Timely Reminder for Budget Negotiators

“Current tax rules provide a wide range of subsidies that are equivalent to government spending,” writes Harvard professor and former Reagan advisor Martin Feldstein in today’s Washington Post.  It’s a timely reminder for budget negotiators looking for savings to replace harmful sequestration cuts.

Take one example he mentions, the mortgage interest deduction.  It provides a tax subsidy for people who own a home, just as housing vouchers provide a subsidy for many low-income people who rent.  Both are federal housing subsidies; the fact that one is delivered through the tax code and the other through a spending program is immaterial.  As Feldstein underscores, “Republicans who would oppose direct outlays on programs [like the voucher program] should favor limiting the subsidies through the tax code.”

Feldstein also points out that “[s]ubstantial revenue could be raised by limiting the government spending built into the tax code.”  As a group, in fact, the tax exemptions, deductions, and other tax breaks collectively known as tax expenditures are larger than each of the major spending programs (see graph), and they’re often less well targeted than comparable program expenditures.  Cuts to tax expenditures should be an important part of a package to replace sequestration.

Image
11-5-13bud-f12.png
Topics:
Chuck Marr
Vice President for Federal Tax Policy