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Making Impossible Tax Reform PossibleSusannah Camic TahkUniversity of Wisconsin Law School September 12, 2012 Fordham Law Review, Forthcoming Abstract: The U.S. has long struggled to reform its federal income tax code. Despite enthusiastic and widespread bipartisan support for tax reform laws that would eliminate special-interest loopholes, the tax legislative process has been paralyzed when it comes to passing these laws. This Article proposes a solution to this seemingly intractable federal tax lawmaking paralysis. This paralysis arises because tax reform spreads its benefits among broad groups while concentrating its costs in narrow ones. Political science theory accurately predicts that laws with this cost-benefit allocation will fail. However, federal lawmakers can overcome tax lawmaking paralysis by distributing tax reform’s costs and benefits differently. In particular, the federal government can do this by following the examples of states that have successfully escaped tax lawmaking paralysis by earmarking taxes for specific purposes. This Article examines the phenomenon of earmarking and examines several instances of earmarked state taxes. In so doing, this Article argues that earmarking tax revenues for particular purposes offers an opportunity for lawmakers to permanently reform the tax code at last.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 46 Keywords: tax, federal income tax, state and local tax, tax policy Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: September 13, 2012 ; Last revised: February 18, 2013Suggested CitationContact Information
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