Tax expenditure
Tax expenditures are government revenue losses from tax exclusions, exemptions, deductions, credits, deferrals, and preferential tax rates. They are a counterpart to direct expenditures, in that they both are forms of government spending.
Tax expenditures function as subsidies for certain activities, they effect both axis of equity of the basic tax system by giving preferential treatment to those activities. For instance, two people who have the same income can have different effective tax rates if one of the tax payers qualifies for certain tax expenditures by owning a home, having children, or receiving employer-provided health care and pension insurance.
Definition
The Congressional [Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974] defines tax expenditures as "those revenue losses attributable to provisions of the Federal tax laws which allow a special credit, a preferential rate of tax, or a deferral of tax liability".The term was coined in 1967 by Stanley S. Surrey, a renowned tax scholar and former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury. Surrey created the term to characterize the political use of tax breaks to enact social policies that would ordinarily be accomplished through direct expenditures. He claimed that Congress were utilitising the policies as "vast subsidy apparatus to reward favored constituencies or subsidize narrow policy areas."
A related concept from the British tax literature is "Fiscal welfare" as proposed by Richard Titmuss in the 1950s. However, this tends to only refer to policies to benefit individuals and not corporations.
Overview
As of fiscal year 2020, the United States Treasury lists over 160 tax expenditures, the majority for private social benefits and services like employee-provided healthcare.Tax expenditures are also common in other countries.
Size of expenditures
The cost of tax expenditures varies from year to year with the level of economic activity, though changes tend to be modest. The Congressional Budget Office estimated that U.S. tax expenditures in fiscal year 2019 totaled $1.6 trillion. This was larger than all discretionary spending and was equal to nearly half of all federal revenue. The CBO has also estimated the size of major tax expenditures on federal receipts as an annual average percent of GDP, for the period of 2016 to 2026. These included, among others:- Exclusions from income: Employment based health insurance and pension contributions
- Deductions from income: State and local taxes and mortgage interest
- Preferential tax rates: Capital gains and dividends
- Tax credits: Earned income tax credit
Distribution of benefits
Existing tax expenditures disproportionally benefit those with high incomes. While certain tax programs like the earned income tax credit are targeted to people with lower incomes, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in 2013 the top 1% of U.S. households by income received approximately 17% of all tax expenditure spending and the top 20% received 51%.Similarly, in 2016 the Congressional Budget Office reported that:
Tax expenditures are distributed unevenly across the income scale. When measured in dollars, much more of the tax expenditures go to higher-income households than to lower-income households. As a percentage of people’s income, tax expenditures are greater for the highest-income and lowest-income households than for households in the middle of the income distribution.