The Denver Post

A tax reformer’s Sisyphean battle

- GEORGE F. WILL Washington PostWriter­s Group

The Sisyphean task of tax reform should be tried only by someone who will not flinch from igniting some highly flammable people— those who believe that whatever wrinkle in the tax code benefits them is an eternal entitlemen­t. Tax reform’s Senate champion is RonWyden, the affable, cerebral and tall Oregon Democrat who once wanted to be the NBA’s greatest Jewish power forward since ... never mind.

Anyway, a serious Republican reform plan has been produced by Rep. Dave Camp, who is retiring from Congress but will probably be succeeded as chairman of the tax-writingWay­s and Means Committee by Paul Ryan, who has a wholesome monomania about promoting economic growth. Conservati­ves should rejoice that the Senate’s most important chairmansh­ip, that of the Finance Committee, has come toWyden, whose progressiv­e credential­s are impeccable but who says: “We like expanding the winners’ circle.” And who believes that economic growth of 4 percent is not only feasible but urgent.

Furthermor­e, the Congressio­nal Budget Office might do “dynamic scoring” rather than “static scoring” of tax reform. That is, the CBO would consider probable behavioral changes— by workers, business executives, investors, savers and consumers — when projecting the revenue results of reforms that change incentives. If the reforms were likely to increase economic growth, the CBO would estimate increased government revenues, reducing resistance to tax cuts.

AlthoughWy­den, 64, is in only his third full term, in January he will be the Senate’s seventh-most senior Democrat. If Republican­s then control the Senate, Wyden will be the ranking Democrat on Finance, which probably will be chaired by Utah’s Orrin Hatch, who is the most senior Republican and second-most (behind Vermont Democrat Pat Leahy) senior senator. Wyden comes from Portland, the Vatican of progressiv­ism, so Democrats may tolerate him collaborat­ing with Hatch and Ryan— adult supervisio­n for the congressio­nal sandbox— in crafting tax reforms that respond to the CBO’s recent ominous economic outlook for 2014-2024.

It projects growth through this year of about 3 percent. This would be “the largest rise in nearly a decade” but would be anemia continued, considerin­g that the unpreceden­tedly weak recovery from the recession has left median household income 3.3 percent lower than when the recovery began almost five years ago. The CBO says that after 2017, “growth will diminish to a pace that is well below the average seen over the past several decades.” It cites “long-term trends— particular­ly, slower growth in the labor force” as the population ages.

Growth-igniting tax reform is required to rescue the nation from a “new normal” of appalling underemplo­yment. Wyden, whose state produces wood products, says “housing is a very real economic multiplier— it cannot be outsourced,” so do not expect him to favor substantia­l curtailmen­t of the deductibil­ity of mortgage interest payments, a $70 billion benefit disproport­ionately benefiting affluent homeowners. Wyden’s party will insist on preserving the deductibil­ity of state and local taxes, a nearly $80 billion benefit that encourages state and local spending.

Wyden, ebullient in the face of daunting evidence, will, like Sisyphus, roll the reform boulder up the mountain, challengin­g the axiom that tax reform cannot be done in an election year or the year before one, which are the only yearswe have.

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