President Obama and GOP candidate Mitt Romney have very similar tax plans, Gleckman writes, but there are some key differences.
EnlargeWhen it comes to taxes, Mitt Romney and Barack Obama are almost perfect mirror images of one another. Here are ten ways their?tax plans?are different.
Skip to next paragraph Howard GleckmanHoward Gleckman is a resident fellow at The Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, the author of Caring for Our Parents, and former senior correspondent in the Washington bureau of Business Week. (http://taxvox.taxpolicycenter.org)
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- Romney?s?tax agenda is ambitious and opaque.?Obama?s?is modest but relatively transparent.
- Obama has shown little interest in broad-based tax reform. Romney wants to fundamentally rewrite the revenue code.
- Romney wants to cut tax rates across the board. Obama wants to raise rates for high-income households.
- Obama wants to hike taxes on the wealthy. Romney does not.
- Obama believes that tax increases on high-income households are a key piece of deficit reduction. Romney would not use even a penny of new revenues to help shrink the deficit.
- Romney believes that low tax rates will generate enough economic growth to jumpstart the economy. Obama does not.
- Obama would preserve tax preferences for green energy. Romney would eliminate them.
- Romney wants to cut taxes on investment income. Obama would raise them.
- Obama would extend the 2009 expansion of tax credits for low- and moderate-income families.? Romney would let them expire.
- Romney would shift the corporate tax to a territorial system in which domestic firms owe no U.S. income tax on their overseas sales but foreign firms pay U.S. tax on money they make here. Obama would continue to?impose U.S. tax on foreign earnings of domestic firms, and make it tougher for those companies to avoid tax by keeping their profits overseas.
The two men do have a few things in common. Both want to cut the corporate tax rate, though Romney would cut it more. Romney would permanently extend all of the?2001-2003 tax cuts?while Obama would continue nearly all of them. Both men would let the 2010 payroll tax reduction expire as scheduled in January. And both apparently believe that households making up to $200,000 or $250,000 are middle-income.
But those differences are small compared to the candidates? vastly different visions of what the revenue code should look like.? On taxes, at least, voters have an important choice to make in a couple of weeks.
The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on taxvox.taxpolicycenter.org.
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