[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 85 (Tuesday, June 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3759-S3761]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TAX REFORM
Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, Senator Coats and I have introduced
bipartisan tax reform legislation. It is the first comprehensive
overhaul of tax reform law in 25 years, since 1986, when then-President
Reagan and Democrats got together and worked on a bipartisan reform
that cleaned out scores of special interest tax breaks in order to hold
down rates for all Americans and keep progressivity.
Senator Coats and I have worked also with Senator Gregg. I had that
good fortune for a number of years, and
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have picked up on some of what was done in 1986 by President Reagan and
a large group of Democrats. He and I intend, in the days ahead, to come
to the floor of the Senate and talk about some of the most offensive
aspects of our totally dysfunctional tax system.
Today, we thought we would begin by discussing the alternative
minimum tax. It seems to be pretty much the poster child for what is
broken about the American tax system. It was enacted in 1969, after the
Congress learned that 3 years earlier 155 wealthy taxpayers had paid no
tax at all. The alternative minimum tax was designed to hit what
amounted to a small group of tax evaders and not the millions of
middle-class taxpayers who get shellacked by the AMT every single
springtime. The problem has been that Congress has never indexed the
AMT brackets for inflation.
While the regular tax bracket standard deductions and exemptions do
get adjusted for inflation, the brackets and exemptions of the
alternative minimum tax do not. As a result, millions of middle-class
taxpayers, whose only fault is their incomes grew with the economy, now
slip into this nefarious alternative minimum tax zone each year.
I would be interested, for purposes of starting this colloquy, to get
the reaction of my friend and partner on it. We are going to bring up a
number of these aspects of the tax system that cry out for overall
reform. But I wonder what my friend's sense is about starting today
with the alternative minimum tax, and how important it is that reform
is done there for middle-class folks in Indiana and around the country.
Mr. COATS. Madam President, I want to thank my colleague from Oregon,
Senator Wyden, for working with me, and particularly working with
Senator Gregg who is now retired from this Chamber. They spent an
extraordinary amount of time, very productive but very time consuming,
trying to put together a comprehensive tax reform, which, as Senator
Wyden has said, has been 25 years since we have tackled the Tax Code to
try to simplify it and try to take out egregious provisions that were
put in it over the years that may benefit a special few but don't begin
to address the average middle-income taxpayer who is bearing a very
substantial burden of taxes paid in this country.
Probably the most egregious provision and, as Senator Wyden said, the
poster child for the current dysfunction of the Tax Code and our tax
system is the alternative minimum tax.
Senator Wyden and Senator Gregg's program that they put together--and
Senator Gregg urged me as I was coming into the Senate and he was
leaving to work with Senator Wyden in terms of working to keep this
bipartisan effort going forward, and I have had the pleasure of doing
so. We do have a comprehensive bill that we wish to debate and share
with our colleagues. But we also want to point out the reason why tax
reform is so necessary.
A Tax Code that now comprises more than 70,000 pages with more than
10,000 special exemptions and preferences is certainly something that
is way beyond our Founders' intention or any intention of taxation of
the American people. This complexity is literally driving everybody
nuts, including the tax accountants and CPAs and those who have to deal
with it every year but, more importantly, the tax filers, American
citizens, who each year start getting the sweats along about mid-March
in terms of how they are going to get their tax return done. If they
try to do it themselves, they ought to be able to; and, if passed,
Wyden-Coats would give them the simplicity of reduced rates, easy
filing for information, and the ability to do their taxes at home.
We spend an extraordinary amount of money--I think it is Americans
spend nearly 6 billion hours a year--to have tax preparers do their tax
returns. The alternative minimum tax is particularly egregious, as
Senator Wyden has said. It is grossly unfair. It hammers working
Americans.
The temporary fix Congress has added in subsequent years from its
initiation now protects individuals with incomes up to $48,000-plus and
couples up to $74,000-plus. But taxpayers who earn more than that get
whacked by the AMT, the alternative minimum tax, and the problem just
gets worse.
As Senator Wyden has said, it started with a few taxpayers in the
high income brackets trying to evade paying any tax. That is how that
came into play. But in 1997, several years later from the initiation,
the AMT has hit 1 percent of all taxpayers. Next year, after this
current fix expires, it will hurt more than 20 percent of taxpayers. To
be exact, that is 34 million hard-working Americans. It is a poor fix
that is currently in place on a temporary basis.
In my State of Indiana, 42,700 taxpayers had to pay AMT taxes in
2008, and without another extension of the patch or the fix, that will
rise to 372,000 in 2012.
If you are a family with a number of children and you live in a high
tax State or a local tax State, you are thrown into the alternative
minimum tax computation. That means a double process by which you or
your preparer has to file your taxes, and it means higher taxes never
intended to hit the working class.
So in continuing this, I wish to reaffirm my thanks to the Senator
from Oregon for allowing me to be part of this effort, and we look
forward to many opportunities to discuss some of the more egregious
portions of the Tax Code and reasons why we need to continue to work
for comprehensive reform.
I would ask my colleague if he would delve a little more deeply into
this in this colloquy we currently are entertaining.
Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, I hope that folks paying attention to
this tax reform debate pick up on what Senator Coats has just
described. When the alternative minimum tax was first debated, the
country was talking about 155 people. These were the so-called wealthy
folks. They were paying no taxes at all. What Senator Coats has just
described is, next year, what started as a program to try to make sure
that 155 people didn't end up getting a sweetheart deal, now we are
going to see 34 million people crushed by this inequitable kind of tax,
a kind of bureaucratic water torture.
We have about the same numbers in Oregon that Senator Coats has in
Indiana. In 2008, 44,000 Oregon taxpayers had to pay the alternative
minimum tax. Without some kind of extension or, as Senator Coats and I
essentially want to do, abolishment of the alternative minimum tax,
that is going to rise to close to 400,000 next year. The people who are
getting hammered by this alternative minimum tax certainly don't fit
that small class of the so-called freeloading wealthy folks who are
figuring out ways to pay nothing.
For example, a woman earns $65,000 in 2010, say she manages a health
club, she has three kids, she has to file her taxes independent of her
husband because they are in the middle of a divorce. As someone who is
married, filing separately, she would have been hit by the AMT in 2010,
according to the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
Think about that, a woman who manages a health club making $65,000,
with three kids, filling out her taxes and going through the
unbelievable headaches, being singled out under the alternative minimum
tax.
I ask my friend from Indiana--and I am sure he has very similar
people in Indiana--is that the kind of person the alternative minimum
tax was designed to scoop up back in 1969?
Mr. COATS. Absolutely not, I would say to the Senator from Oregon.
Clearly, if you go back to the origin of the alternative minimum tax,
it was designed to go after those handful, in comparison to the total
number of taxpayers in this country, who have found creative ways of
not paying any taxes whatsoever. Wealthy taxpayers have simply been
able to manipulate the Tax Code legally but in a way that allowed them
to avoid paying taxes altogether. That is how all of this started.
What has happened is that we are now in a situation where it is
grossly unfair to the majority of taxpayers in this country simply
because they fall into categories that throw them into having the AMT
calculated in their tax returns. It is costing them a lot of money. It
was never intended to address the middle-class taxpayer, and it has
grown exponentially since it started.
Mr. WYDEN. Would the Senator agree that the difficulty of projecting
the AMT tax liability makes it tough
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for taxpayers to compute their estimated tax payments and creates a
situation in which, just because of its complexity, they can get hit
with penalties?
I think the reason Oregonians are concerned about this--we have heard
about it in the Senate Finance Committee--is that the AMT is
essentially a separate tax system with its own tax rates and deduction
rules which are less generous than regular rates and regular rules.
This contributes to the tax-filing nightmare. The only way you can tell
if you owe the alternative minimum tax is by filling out the forms or
by being audited by the Internal Revenue Service. If it turns out you
should have paid the alternative minimum tax and didn't, you owe back
taxes plus any penalties or interests the IRS wants to dole out.
My question is, I ask my good friend, how in the world is a typical
taxpayer going to be able to make sense out of something like that
which lots of accountants tell me they cannot even sort through?
Mr. COATS. The Senator from Oregon is exactly right. I took three tax
courses in law school. I cannot do my taxes with any assurance that I
am doing it right because this code has become so incredibly
complicated. The alternative minimum tax adds an additional set of
calculations that make it even more complicated.
Today, 80 percent of the tax filers have to get help to file their
taxes, 20 percent of those buy software and hook it into their computer
and try to work through it that way, and 60 percent take it to a
professional. If you are not working as a professional in a career as a
CPA or a tax return specialist, you cannot keep up with the 70,000
pages and 10,000-plus exemptions and the complexity of filing a return.
It should not in any sense of the matter be a tax collection system
that requires 80 percent of our taxpayers to have to seek professional
help at a significant cost. As I think I indicated earlier, $6 billion
a year is spent on transferring money from the person paying the taxes
to someone just to prepare their returns.
Small businesses face a similar problem. Small businesses do not have
the big back room with the hired accountants and others to handle all
the paperwork. Small business men and women have to be out front
selling the product and have to be talking to the customer. Yet they
now also are caught up in this web of complexity in terms of how to
file their taxes, and they are having to expend time and money on
getting their tax returns filed and making sure they are filed right.
Over time, as the deficit and debt problem has increased
significantly, Members have been all the more reluctant to eliminate
this on a single stand-alone basis because of the impact it would have
on our ballooning deficit. But on comprehensive tax reform, if we can
put this together with a package of comprehensive reforms, we can do it
in a revenue-neutral basis so it does not have an adverse impact on the
economy.
Again, I commend Senator Wyden and Senator Gregg for putting together
a package that does just that, and I ask my colleague if he wants to
elaborate on that a little bit. I thank him for the opportunity to come
down to discuss for the first if not the last time some of the
egregious aspects of the Tax Code in this country that I think will
dictate how we should move forward and why we should move forward in
enacting comprehensive tax reform.
I thank the Senator.
Mr. WYDEN. The distinguished majority leader is here. I think we are
about to wrap up. I am certainly happy to yield to him if he needs a
few minutes to do the business of the Senate, and then Senator Coats
and I will wrap up.
Mr. REID. Madam President, it is my understanding that the hour of 5
o'clock has arrived.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The majority leader is recognized.
The Senator is correct.
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