In defending his tax plan which many analysts thought impossible Mitt Romney did come up with 2 good ideas, one of which may be a partial solution to the fiscal cliff we are facing.
President Obama is pretty insistent on raising the tax rates on households making over a quarter million dollars per year. Republicans are insistent that this rate won’t be raised. This standoff is over the temporary Bush tax cuts which should have expired but were temporarily extended 2 years ago and are now set to expire again at the end of this year.
The Democratic view is that these tax cuts should be kept in place for those households making over a quarter million dollars per year and allowed to expire for those earning more. The Republican view is that the tax cuts should be extended for everyone, regardless of income. Let us just call this the tax rate standoff.
Certainly there are many other tax issues – the estate tax, payroll taxes, dividend taxes, capital gains taxes, carried interest to name a few – but I think Mitt Romney may have suggested the solution to the tax rate standoff.
So here is Mitt’s good idea :
And so, in terms of bringing down deductions, one way of doing that would be say everybody gets — I’ll pick a number — $25,000 of deductions and credits, and you can decide which ones to use. Your home mortgage interest deduction, charity, child tax credit, and so forth, you can use those as part of filling that bucket, if you will, of deductions.
So if rates are kept the same on everyone (as the Republicans want), Congress can still limit deductions to a number which will not adversely effect those households making less than a quarter million dollars per year but would still raise taxes on those households making over a quarter million dollars per year (as the Democrats want).
Of course, it won’t be a sharp divide at a quarter million dollars per year but it meets the spirit of what both sides want to do. I’m not sure if the number picked is the right one and if there should be additional rules but this caps could be the start of a discussion.