Peterson Foundation Statement on Senate Tax Bill – November 9, 2017

NEW YORK — Michael A. Peterson, President and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, commented today on public reports of the proposed Senate tax reform legislation, which would add $1.5 trillion in deficits over the next ten years, plus interest:
“This bill passes the buck to the next generation. Like the House bill, the Senate proposal includes reforms that are neither permanent nor paid for, both of which impede the objective of growing the economy.
“Budget gimmicks like arbitrary phase-ins and expirations prevent families and businesses from being able to plan and invest, which defeats the purpose of pro-growth reforms. Fiscally irresponsible reforms are counter-productive, because adding more to our national debt hurts the economy.
“Since tax reform in 1986, our national debt has ballooned from $2 trillion to $20 trillion, and has more than doubled as a share of the economy. Our deficit outlook is also much worse, with $10 trillion of projected deficits over the next ten years. On our current path, we will spend $6 trillion on interest alone over the next decade, and interest will become the third largest federal ‘program.’
“Voluntarily adding another $1.5 trillion to our national debt is going in the wrong direction.
“This is a generational opportunity to enact tax reform to both improve our fiscal outlook and enable sustained economic growth. To do so, reforms must foster simplicity, fairness and growth, while also being fiscally responsible. The current proposals contain important elements of tax reform, such as eliminating or reducing the number of tax expenditures, but they need to go further. With $15 trillion of loopholes in the code over ten years, they only need to eliminate another 10% to pay for the cost of this legislation.
“Many lawmakers have long spoken of the need for fiscal responsibility and economic growth, and they now have a rare but very valuable chance to follow through on both counts.”
Further Reading
No Taxes on Tips Will Drive Deficits Higher
Here’s how this new, temporary deduction will affect federal revenues, budget deficits, and tax equity.
The Federal Government Has Borrowed Trillions. Who Owns All that Debt?
Most federal debt is owed to domestic holders, but foreign ownership is much higher now than it was about 50 years ago.
With $38 Trillion in Debt, Is the U.S. Headed for More Credit Downgrades?
Three successive downgrades of the U.S. credit rating should alarm elected leaders, but our national debt remains on an unsustainable trajectory.