From Deseret News archives:
Demo plan would limit alternative tax
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"More and more families see their incomes bumped up to the realm where they're affected," said Jason Furman, an economist at the liberal-leaning Brookings Institution.
The AMT forces people to calculate their taxes in two ways - first with the deductions and exemptions available under the regular tax structure, and again with the vastly limited menu of exemptions available under the AMT. Taxpayers pay the higher of the two numbers.
For the past several years, Congress has passed temporary fixes to lessen the impact on taxpayers, making the AMT apply to only about 4 million taxpayers each year. But efforts to enact permanent adjustments have stalled amid political bickering.
The biggest obstacle to changing the system has been expense: Repealing the AMT would cost between $800 billion and $1.5 trillion over the next decade. Neal has long favored a total repeal, though some Democrats and interest groups are urging only a partial repeal aimed at shielding the middle class. Neal said all options are being considered by his committee.
With the president's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts disproportionately benefiting the wealthy, Democrats are exploring ways to scale back those cuts to pay for cuts in the AMT, House Ways and Means chairman Charles Rangel said Sunday on Fox News Channel.
"We may be talking about redirecting those tax cuts," said Rangel, a New York Democrat. "And so, within the system, there can be more equity."
Rangel added that members of the Ways and Means Committee are working with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to find common ground on the AMT. The president has endorsed a permanent fix that doesn't put additional strain on the Treasury, though he has also called for making the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts permanent, said Tony Fratto, a White House spokesman.
"We're not talking about scaling back the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts," Fratto said. "We're going to keep talking to Congress. We do want to come up with a solution."
A move by Democrats to raise taxes on the wealthy would open Democrats up to political attacks. Pat Toomey, the president of the conservative group Club for Growth, said Congress should repeal the AMT, but shouldn't simultaneously look to raise taxes.
"Rangel's plan to undo the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 might as well be called the Economic Destruction Act of 2007," said Toomey.
But Neal said Democrats can maneuver around such opposition by pointing out how many middle-income taxpayers are being hurt by the current system, especially in higher-income states.
"Those members of Congress who come from states that are going to bear that burden, I would assume that they're going to be in the mood to be cooperative," Neal said.
Learn more about the Alternative Minimum Tax at boston.com/business/taxes
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