Fern
Elite Member
- Sep 30, 2003
- 26,907
- 174
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The irking thing is this actually does sound like a good plan.....one i would like to be able to get behind.
But.....what deductions/exemptions/credits?
When romney says in a debate "let's pretend you can only have x $ of deductions" and obviously is making that number up on the spot.....I have a hard time believing he has a real plan in terms of a list of the various deductions that would be cut or eliminated. It would be nice if it was true, though.
That will be a difficult problem. Too many Congresspersons with too many constituents invested in various deductions/credits/exemptions. But it has been done before, most notably under Reagan.
Romney should not be promoting any specifics as to reductions/limitations in deductions etc. For one thing, he's not going to have much say in it, that's Congress's football to kick around. For another, if he did the whole issue becomes a referendum on the individual reductions/eliminations he identifies. That would be enormously counter-productive.
The tax code is mighty complicated, with a large number of deductions, credits and exemptions available for cutting. The number of possibilities of various combinations is almost unlimited. From what I've seen Romney is saying they are all on table, so Congress has all the leeway possible to sort it out. Will they be able to get it done? IMO, that is the real question, and I've seen nothing to suggest they can.
Almost everyone in the tax profession, the business community and tax staff on both sides of the aisle in Washington DC want something along the lines Romney has proposed -a broad flatter tax system with out-dated deductions etc eliminated. To my knowledge not many serious people are suggesting anything but a revenue neutral overhaul, but this discussion has been ongoing now for several years with apparently no real success.
Fern