Tax expenditure budgets, budget policy, and tax policy: Confusion in the states

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Abstract

A tax expenditure budget should contribute to efficient and effective public decisions by quantifying the division in the tax structure between provisions that represent revenue policy (distribute the cost of government according to the legislated tax base) and parts that represent budget policy (substitute for direct spending). For this transparency to have the desired impact, however, the tax expenditure budget process and the direct expenditure process must be properly integrated and the tax expenditure budget must make an accurate division between the parts of the tax structure. A review of the 33 states with tax expenditure systems shows many weaknesses in application of the concept and poor linkage to the direct spending budget system. Their most significant flaw is in dividing the tax structure into normal and preference elements; states need greater attention to defining their basic tax structure if they are to have a meaningful tax expenditure budget. © 2002 Blackwell Publishers Inc.

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APA

Mikesell, J. L. (2002). Tax expenditure budgets, budget policy, and tax policy: Confusion in the states. Public Budgeting and Finance, 22(4), 34–51. https://doi.org/10.1111/1540-5850.00088

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