Lastly, Yale Budget Lab projects extending the TCJA would boost the economy by as much as 0.4 percent after three years – about 0.138 percentage points per year – but then slow economic growth by an average of 0.035 percentage points per year thereafter. After three decades, GDP would be 0.5 percent smaller with the expiring TCJA provisions extended than if they were allowed to expire.
Why Are Effects So Modest?
As we have explained before, tax cuts rarely if ever fully pay for themselves. Because taxes capture only a fraction of income and some spending grows with income, a policy would need to produce $5 to $6 of economic activity for every $1 of cost to be self-financing.
However, tax cuts are often partially self-financing. For example, CBO estimated the original 2017 TCJA would pay for 20 percent of itself (other estimates ranged from 8 percent to 70 percent). As shown above, an extension of the TCJA would likely generate far less dynamic feedback.
One reason for the modest estimates of dynamic feedback from extension is that the most pro-growth elements of the TCJA were mostly made permanent in the original legislation, leaving the less pro-growth provisions to expire. That includes the (partially paid-for) cut in the corporate income tax rate from 35 to 21 percent. It also includes some of the offsets – particularly those related to international taxation and to the individual mandate penalty in the Affordable Care Act – which offset costs without meaningfully reducing (and in some cases increasing) incentives to work and invest.
Most of the expiring provisions in the TCJA have to do with individual income taxes, where there tends to be less opportunity to dramatically increase economic activity. Furthermore, while a broader tax base is generally conducive to stronger economic growth, the expiring provisions in the TCJA include elements that would narrow the tax base, such as a $750 billion expansion of the Child Tax Credit and a $680 billion tax break for pass-through business income.
In addition, the large increase in the debt that would result from extending the TCJA without offsets would counteract the positive economic effects of extension by crowding out private investment and slowing income growth. Excluding economic feedback, CBO projects that extending major parts of the TCJA would increase debt by nearly 11 percent of GDP by Fiscal Year (FY) 2034, compared to less than 8 percent by FY 2028 in its original estimate from 2018. Meanwhile, interest rates, inflationary pressures, and the debt itself are all much higher now than when the TCJA was enacted.
Can Tax Reform Be More Pro-Growth?
While extending the expiring provisions of the TCJA alone would do little to promote economic growth and generate additional revenue, the coming expiration could be used as an opportunity to enact thoughtful, responsible, and more pro-growth tax reform. This could involve extending (or expanding) the most desirable elements of the TCJA, allowing the least effective provisions to expire, modifying and reforming other provisions, and offsetting any remaining cost of extension so that the negative economic effects of adding to the debt are minimized.
For instance, the Tax Foundation has outlined two options for extending the TCJA that would further broaden the tax base in order to maintain much (but not all) of the TCJA’s individual and corporate reforms. They also outline more fundamental reform options that would transition from an income-based tax system to a more consumption-based tax system. A plan put forward by professors Kimberly Clausing and Natasha Sarin would increase the progressivity of the tax code, limit existing avenues for tax avoidance, and address issues like climate change while also reducing deficits. And Kyle Pomerleau and Donald Schneider put forward two options for extending most of the structural elements of the TCJA while further broadening the base, reforming corporate international and cost-recovery rules, and setting a new rate structure in order to achieve revenue neutrality.
According to their own estimates, the Tax Foundation plans would boost long-term output by between 0.9 and 2.5 percent, the Clausing-Sarin plan by 0.84 percent, and the Pomerleau-Schneider plan by 0.5 to 3.8 percent. In most cases, these plans would generate significant dynamic revenue. (You can read more about these plans at the links in the table below.)
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