In
1999, the World Trade Organization (WTO) first ruled that the
so-called FSC/ETI
tax preference for export-oriented income was an "impermissible
trade subsidy." It has subsequently ruled three more times that the
United States cannot tax income from exports at a lower rate than
other forms of business income. As a result of the WTO rulings, the
European Union is now allowed to impose additional taxes on
American exports. To bring the U.S. into compliance and remove
these additional taxes, both the House of Representatives and the
Senate have recently approved bills (H.R. 4520 and S. 1637) to
repeal the offending provision.
The
FSC/ETI law is not good tax policy and should be repealed in any
case. Special tax breaks for certain types of income are a form of
industrial policy in which the government micromanages the economy
for the benefit of politically powerful interest groups and to the
detriment of the general public. The FSC/ETI provision--worth about
$5 billion per year--certainly meets this criterion. The economy
performs much better, and to everyone's advantage, when tax rates
are low and when economic--rather than political--factors determine
how people choose to work, save, and invest.
While virtually every policymaker agrees
that repealing the FSC/ETI law would be appropriate, the battle in
Congress has been about how to use the $50 billion of increased tax
revenue that will result from eliminating the export preference.
There is widespread agreement that the money should be used for
business-related tax cuts, but the House and Senate have taken a
long time to choose from the many competing options.
Regrettably, lawmakers have generally made
bad choices. Instead of adopting policies (such as lowering the
corporate tax rate or eliminating the extra layer of tax on
foreign-source income) that would boost U.S. competitiveness by
reforming and reducing tax rates for all firms, both the House and
Senate have devoted most of the tax revenue windfall in their
respective bills to special tax preferences for domestic
manufacturing. This merely replaces one form of misguided
industrial policy with another. Moreover, the bills also contain
numerous "pork" provisions that benefit narrow interest groups.
This is hardly unusual, and these provisions may be a trivial
concern compared to the failure to use the FSC/ETI money in a way
that will make America more prosperous. Nonetheless, they should be
removed in the final legislation.
The
important thing now is for the Bush Administration and the
congressional leadership to give strong and clear guidance to the
Senate-House conferees about the bills, because so far Congress has
evidently decided to put parochial interests ahead of using the
repeal of the FSC/ETI law to achieve tax reform and boost economic
growth.
Rectifying a Missed Opportunity?
While the separate bills approved by the
House and Senate are the bad news, the good news is that the
conference committee that will reconcile the differences has an
opportunity to create a much better final product. To this end, the
Senate-House conferees should:
Replace Special
Breaks with a General Rate Reduction
Conferees should junk the many industrial-policy tax
breaks and instead reduce the corporate tax rate. This sounds like
a dramatic change, but lawmakers need only expand the preferential
tax rate for manufacturing companies in the House version of the
legislation and make it universal for all businesses. This would
turn a special tax break into an across-the-board tax rate
reduction--the legislative equivalent of turning a sow's ear into a
silk purse. Not only would a lower corporate tax rate be a
significant policy improvement, it would be a much-needed first
step toward fixing a major flaw in the tax code.
The
United States currently has the second highest corporate tax rate
in the world, exceeded only by Japan's. With a 35 percent federal
tax rate and an average state corporate tax rate of 5 percent,
America's 40 percent corporate tax rate is higher than the rate in
every European nation--even socialist welfare states like France
and Sweden. This creates a significant competitive disadvantage for
U.S.-based companies. The FSC/ETI money would probably allow only a
modest reduction in the corporate tax rate, but this would be
desirable so long as policymakers see it as the beginning--with
more rate reductions to be implemented as soon as possible.
Cutting the corporate tax rate would be a
pro-growth tax reform. Shifting closer to territorial taxation
would also be a pro-growth tax reform. However, a special tax
preference for manufacturing income--as contained in both
bills--would make the tax code even more complicated and could
hinder economic growth.
Expand the Level
of International Tax Reform in the Two Bills
The United States is in a small minority of nations that
tax business income earned outside national borders. This policy of
"worldwide taxation" is inconsistent with fundamental tax reform
and imposes a heavy compliance burden on U.S.-based corporations.
Most important, this policy undermines U.S. competitiveness, which
is why territorial taxation would be preferable. Territorial
taxation--the common-sense policy of taxing only income earned
inside national borders--would enable U.S. companies in foreign
markets to compete on a level playing field. The FSC/ETI money
could be used to take a big step in that direction.
Revisit the
Special Interest Provisions
The FSC/ETI legislation includes several special-interest
provisions. Language in the Senate bill provides tax breaks for
Oldsmobile dealers and owners of NASCAR racetracks. The House
version includes tax benefits for bank directors and the producers
of fishing-tackle boxes and sonar fish-finders.
One
item of particular concern in the House version is a $9.6 billion
tobacco bailout. Washington currently props up tobacco prices by
allowing only quota holders to grow tobacco. Often, these quota
holders rent out the quota to farmers at considerable profit. The
House proposal would eliminate the tobacco quotas and allow anyone
to grow tobacco, while compensating growers and quota holders $9.6
billion for the lost value of their quotas.
While eliminating these over-regulatory
quotas would lower prices, encourage exports, and help farmers,
adding a $9.6 billion bailout raises several issues. First, can
taxpayers afford such an expensive bailout and would this become a
permanent tobacco subsidy as soon as prices inevitably fall?
Second, because quotas were never guaranteed to be permanent, it is
unclear why quota holders are "entitled" to
compensation--especially for what some would consider an unfair
preference in the first place. Much of this money would also go to
large agribusinesses and there is no guarantee that quotas would
not return later. Lawmakers should more closely examine these and
all special-interest spending provisions in the two bills.
Rating the House and Senate Tax
Provisions
Some
specific tax provisions in the House and Senate bills are good and
are worth keeping. Others are terrible for taxpayers and the
economy and should be jettisoned and the revenue saved should be
devoted to general corporate tax reduction.
- Special break
for domestic manufacturing income. Both bills have
gimmicks that benefit certain types of manufacturing income.
Ideally, neither version will become law, but the Senate version is
far worse than the House version. Instead of a tax rate reduction,
the Senate bill creates a complicated new deduction. Moreover, it
contains an odd provision that limits the deduction for U.S.
companies that successfully compete in global markets. The House
bill is more palatable because it contains a rate reduction (albeit
discriminatory) that presumably could be expanded at some point to
apply to all companies.
- International
reform. Both bills have largely similar incremental
reforms of America's anti-competitive worldwide tax system. These
should be retained and ideally expanded.
- Repatriation. Both bills have provisions
allowing globally active U.S. companies to bring overseas profits
back to America without paying a 35 percent tax penalty. Although
this provision is temporary and designed solely to attract capital
to the American economy, it is quite likely that this temporary
provision (in some sense, a form of retroactive territorial
taxation) will help lawmakers understand that worldwide taxation
should be permanently eliminated.
- Sales tax
deduction. The House version recreates the option of a
federal deduction for state sales tax payments. This would
facilitate bigger government at the state level and create another
interest group against tax reform. This provision should be
dropped. State income and property taxes can already be deducted,
so there is a perverse inequity in current law, but this injustice
is best addressed by eliminating all state tax deductibility and
using the resulting revenue to lower tax rates.
- Economic
substance doctrine. The Senate bill "codifies" a bizarre
provision that enables the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to
penalize businesses for transactions that the agency determines
were tax motivated. The economic substance doctrine is offensive,
and enshrining it in law would be abusive. For instance, if this
doctrine applied to personal income taxes, an IRS bureaucrat could
second guess a homeowner and, after deciding that the home was
purchased for tax purposes, disallow the mortgage interest
deduction and fine the taxpaying homeowner. This is essentially how
the economic substance doctrine applies to businesses. Defenders
say codification is needed to stop tax shelter abuses, but the real
answer is to junk the corporate tax and replace it with a
consumption-based, cash-flow tax, such as the business portion of a
flat tax. In any event, codification of the economic substance
doctrine should be dropped.
- Corporate
inversion. The House bill has some discriminatory
provisions against companies that re-charter in jurisdictions with
better tax laws (a practice called "inversion"). The Senate bill,
however, is far worse. It would treat foreign companies as if they
were U.S. companies, creating a dangerous precedent that foreign
governments might then use against America. All anti-inversion
provisions should be dropped.
- Expatriation. Both bills contain
punitive provisions that would increase exit taxes on taxpayers who
emigrate and are somehow deemed to be leaving the U.S. for tax
reasons. Any form of exit tax is objectionable. These provisions
should be dropped.
- Section
911. Unlike almost every other government in the world,
the United States taxes citizens who live and work overseas. This
is an anti-competitive form of double taxation, and the Senate bill
would make the law even worse by including housing in the
definition of income that the IRS can double-tax.
- Tax
"extenders." Both bills have provisions that would
"extend" temporary tax breaks for things like research and
development costs, work opportunity tax credits, and teacher
expenses. Most of these provisions are bad tax policy and should be
dropped.
- Energy tax
provisions. The Senate version has a host of special tax
breaks for the production and use of special forms of energy. These
forms of industrial policy should be dropped from the final
bill.
- S-corporations. The Senate bill would
extend the preferential tax treatment for manufacturing to
S-corporations. The House bill has a number of important reforms
that would ease the regulatory burdens that make it difficult for
investors to utilize a Subchapter S corporate structure (which is
desirable since there is no double-taxation of profits, as occurs
with traditional corporate structures). For instance, the House
bill increases the number of investors that can participate in a
Subchapter S corporation and treats family members as one
shareholder. These provisions should be kept.
- Special interest
pork. Both bills have an unsightly amalgamation of narrow
tax provisions. A few of these provisions are defensible but most
are special-interest tax breaks. In an ideal world, these
provisions would be dropped. At the very least, limiting the amount
of revenue used for these purposes would be a good idea.
Conclusion
Tax
policy should not be based on which industry has the best lobbyists
or which interest group donates the most money. The tax code should
be designed to collect the necessary revenue (ideally a very
limited amount) in a manner that imposes the least amount of
economic damage. A single-rate, consumption-based territorial
regime such as the flat tax is an example of such a system.
If
tax proposals are judged against that ideal, the House and Senate
FSC/ETI bills earn poor grades. Lawmakers had opportunities to
enact across-the-board rate reductions and international tax
reform. However, they made little progress on either front.
While the two bills may be better than the
current law, that is only because they would repeal the FSC/ETI
provisions. Unless the conference committee produces a
significantly different bill, the final legislation will be a huge
missed opportunity to improve the tax code and foster economic
growth.
Daniel J. Mitchell, Ph.D., is McKenna
Senior Research Fellow in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic
Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.