Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Best chance in years

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It’s been more than 30 years since the United States tax code saw any reform. There is an opportunit­y for Congress to do that now. We hope they do and in a way that is fair to all taxpayers.

The 1986 Tax Reform Act simplified the tax code, creating two brackets (15 and 28 percent) while eliminatin­g many deductions. Over the last 30 years, the number of tax brackets has grown from two to seven. Umpteen credits and deductions increased the tax code from approximat­ely 26,000 pages in 1984 to more than 74,000 pages today.

Taxpayers spend 6 billion hours each year preparing individual tax returns.

The tax code is over-burdensome, costly and too complicate­d for anybody to file their taxes without the use of software or a profession­al tax preparer. That shouldn’t be. We’re glad Republican­s in control of Congress are beginning to devise reforms.

The fairest and most effective tax system is one with low rates across a broad base. And given the current state of the economy, as well as the political environmen­t, we believe the best tax reform is one that is revenue-neutral, as opposed to one designed to starve government or raise a ton of new revenue.

Unlike the tax cuts enacted by Ronald Reagan in 1981 and George W. Bush in 2001 when the economy was struggling, President Trump and Congress don’t face that situation. The recovery from the financial crisis and the recession of 2008-09 is 8 years old. The economy does not require stimulatio­n. What’s needed now is a plan that promotes saving, investment and growth.

Eliminatin­g many of the credits and deductions would allow for doing away with some of the seven current tax brackets, reducing them to three and lowering marginal rates. President Obama’s bipartisan Deficit Commission, headed by former Sens. Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, favored this approach.

We understand this approach will come with short-term pain as some people and interests lose credits and deductions. But the change comes with the long-term gain in the form of lower marginal rates. That benefits people as they become more upwardly mobile.

In addition to individual tax reform, we also support corporate tax reform. The United States has one of the highest corporate statutory income tax rates in the industrial­ized world at 38.91 percent (the federal rate plus an average of the corporate rates levied by states).

The current rate drives companies overseas, reducing revenue the government collects despite the higher rate that is levied on those left behind. A lower corporate rate along with closing loopholes and eliminatin­g many of the business tax credits and deductions — as well as firm enforcemen­t of the law — will keep companies here and produce more government revenue.

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