Simple Smart Seminar
  • Stock
  • Investing
  • Politics
  • Tech News
  • Editor’s Pick
Editor's PickInvesting

Tax Expenditure Madness Bracket: Pick the Worst Tax Loophole

by March 20, 2025
March 20, 2025 0 comment

Adam N. Michel

Welcome to Tax Expenditure Madness!

Republicans are hard at work piecing together their tax package to extend and expand the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which expires at the end of this year. They are also looking for ways to raise revenue by cutting tax expenditures. Tax Expenditure Madness is here to help Congress identify the worst features of the tax code.

Over the next two weeks, you’ll decide the worst tax expenditure in a series of X polls. Vote for your least favorite here!

Tax Expenditure Madness

The goal of the 2025 tax extensions should be to keep tax rates as low as possible and meet calls for additional pro-growth tax cuts, such as a lower corporate tax rate and permanent investment expensing. To do this within the constraints of the budget process and the fiscal realities of $2 trillion annual deficits, Congress needs to cut spending and find tax offsets.

Tax offsets are often “tax expenditures” or the things in the tax code that create loopholes and preferences for myriad private activities, including politically popular energy sources, education, children, health care, research, state governments, and housing. The Treasury Department listed 170 tax expenditures in the most recent tally, and the Joint Committee on Taxation tally is even higher.

Not every tax expenditure is bad or deserves to be repealed. Some tax expenditures move the tax code toward a neutral consumption tax base by decreasing harmful economic distortions of double taxation built into the normal income tax system. Some of these good tax expenditures are immediate deductions for investments and exemptions for investment income, like 401(k) retirement accounts. Other tax expenditures—and the focus of Tax Expenditure Madness—create true special interest carve-outs and loopholes that grant privileges to some at the expense of others.

Cato’s Chris Edwards describes this distinction in detail in his Cato report, “Tax Expenditures and Tax Reform,” and I have proposed reforming the official definition of tax expenditure to make this distinction clearer to policymakers. 

In the spirit of March Madness, I’ve chosen 32 of the most expensive, economically distortionary, and targeted tax expenditures that are genuine loopholes for a bracket contest for the worst tax expenditures in the tax code.

If it were up to me, I’d eliminate all 32 categories of credits, deductions, and exemptions. Removing these provisions and about a dozen others is the foundation of the Cato Tax Plan. It eliminates about $14 trillion worth of tax expenditures over a decade, paired with massively pro-growth tax cuts that reduce income, investment, and business taxes to near 100-year lows.

This exercise illustrates the trade-off between the tax base and tax rates. The more holes Congress puts in the tax base—in the form of special deductions, credits, and exemptions—the higher tax rates must be to raise the same revenue. As tax rates increase, the economic cost of the tax rises exponentially.

I’ve intentionally included many politically popular features of the tax code. For example, even if you believe the federal government should provide subsidies for children, or low-income housing, or electric vehicles, is the tax code the best place for those subsidies? In most cases, tax preferences are effectively uncapped mandatory spending programs without regular congressional oversight. Spending on social and economic policy could be better targeted and fiscally accountable if it were annually appropriated.

The contest will be run on my X profile (@adamnmichel). Voting for the first four rounds (posted over the next four weekdays) will be open through the end of the day on Tuesday, March 25. You can find short explanations on my Substack, Liberty Taxed, here for additional details on each provision.

The goal is to crown the worst tax expenditure. Judge them however you’d like: worst economic distortion, highest cost, narrowest constituency, or most effective lobbyists. 

Tax expenditure bracket

0 comment
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
previous post
Is Foreign Aid Altruistic?
next post
Israel reimposes blockade of northern Gaza, including capital Gaza City

You may also like

Recession Ahead? Sector Rotation Model Warns of Rising...

May 10, 2025

Where the Market Goes Next: Key Resistance Levels...

May 10, 2025

Investment Portfolio Feeling Stagnant? Transform Your Path Today

May 9, 2025

Which Will Hit First: SPX 6100 or SPX...

May 9, 2025

Confused by the Market? Let the Traffic Light...

May 9, 2025

The V Reversal is Impressive, but is it...

May 9, 2025

Friday Feature: MCP Academy

May 9, 2025

Luna Introduces PATRIOT Act Repeal Bill

May 9, 2025

In Congress, a Move To Strip Courts of...

May 9, 2025

Don’t Buy Robinhood Stock… Until You See This...

May 8, 2025

    Fill Out & Get More Relevant News


    Stay ahead of the market and unlock exclusive trading insights & timely news. We value your privacy - your information is secure, and you can unsubscribe anytime. Gain an edge with hand-picked trading opportunities, stay informed with market-moving updates, and learn from expert tips & strategies.

    Recent Posts

    • Recession Ahead? Sector Rotation Model Warns of Rising Risk

      May 10, 2025
    • Where the Market Goes Next: Key Resistance Levels + Top Bullish Stocks to Watch Now

      May 10, 2025
    • Investment Portfolio Feeling Stagnant? Transform Your Path Today

      May 9, 2025
    • Which Will Hit First: SPX 6100 or SPX 5100?

      May 9, 2025
    • Confused by the Market? Let the Traffic Light Indicator Guide You

      May 9, 2025
    • The V Reversal is Impressive, but is it Enough?

      May 9, 2025
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 simplesmartseminar.com | All Rights Reserved

    Simple Smart Seminar
    • Stock
    • Investing
    • Politics
    • Tech News
    • Editor’s Pick