10 Big Tax Breaks For The Rest of Us: Jeff Schnepper
10 Big Tax Breaks For The Rest of Us: Jeff Schnepper
10 Big Tax Breaks For The Rest of Us: Jeff Schnepper
It's not just the rich who shelter huge amounts of income from the IRS. See how you stack up.
Tax-expenditure spending and direct spending are two sides of the same coin. Nearly any tax
expenditure can be recast as a spending program. One side reduces the revenues collected. The
other side increases the actual cash outflows. The real difference is nothing more than a choice
between alternative administrative mechanisms.
At least that's the theory. In fact, just like spending provisions, these tax expenditures are really the
result of pressure applied by special-interest groups seeking relief provisions for their own
constituencies.
For example, the additional amount added to the standard deduction for the blind isn't available for
the deaf. I suspect this may have more to do with the political and lobbying power of the two groups
than with any inherent difference between the hardships.
What kind of savings are you getting from your own expenditure tax shelters? A lot, according to a
2008 report by the Joint Committee on Taxation (.pdf file) on tax expenditure estimates for fiscal
years 2008-2012. Check out the tax shelter deals you may be getting. (Note: These are ranked by
size.)
I guess that if the expenditure puts money in my pocket, it represents good, sound tax policy.
On the other hand, if I'm a renter in a state with a high sales tax and no income tax and you own a
home in a state that has income tax, your deductions for interest, real estate tax and state income
tax are coming out of the taxes I pay. You're the one with a real tax shelter. I'm the one making up
the difference.
Updated July 7, 2009