Synopses & Reviews
A majority of Americans are dissatisfied with the current income tax system. They complain that taxes are too high, complicated, difficult, unfair, and sometimes intrusive to enforce. Yet how should the system be fixed? In Taxing Ourselves, Joel Slemrod and Jon Bakija offer a guide to the tax reform debate in clear, nontechnical language without misleading the reader with oversimplifications. The second edition takes account of tax developments through 1998, examines recent research on the economic impact of taxation, and includes a new appendix containing the key statistics on the U.S. tax system throughout its history.
The book gives a historical perspective on taxation in the United States along with a concise description of our current federal income tax system. It reviews basic criteria by which tax policy should be judged and examines how the tax burden is distributed and what is known about the economic effects of taxation. The book then covers the key elements of various tax reform proposals, including a single rate, a clean base, and a consumption base. The book closes with a voter's guide to tax reform for the concerned citizen to keep handy when the rhetoric heats up—as it inevitably will during the 2000 presidential campaign—to help separate fact from fiction and reality from campaign promises.
Review
"Cutting through the academic jargon, the authors ...explore the fundamental questions and choices inherent in tax policymaking."
— Boston Sunday Globe
Review
Praise for the first edition
"Taxing Ourselves is one of the best books on taxation I have ever read."
—Bruce Bartlett, Wall Street Journal
"For anybody interested in tax reform, yet confused by political polemic, Taxing Ourselves is an invaluable guide to the debate."
—The Economist
Synopsis
A clear, informative guide to tax reform, including a voter's guide for the 2000 presidential campaign.
Synopsis
A majority of Americans are dissatisfied with the current income tax system. They complain that taxes are too high, complicated, difficult, unfair, and sometimes intrusive to enforce. Yet how should the system be fixed? In
About the Author
Joel Slemrod is Paul W. McCracken Collegiate Professor of Business Economics and Public Policy and Director of the Office of Tax Policy Research at the University of Michigan.Jon Bakija is Associate Professor of Economics at Williams College and Visiting Associate Professor of Law at Cornell University Law School, 2007-2008.