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Friday, November 20, 2009
 
 
BOOKS
Toward Fundamental Tax Reform
 
 
AEI Press
 
 
Paperback
 
6'' x 9''
 
181 pages
 
ISBN: 084474234-1
 
Price: $ 20
 
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Examination Copies
This volume provides readers with concise but varying perspectives on the possibilities of tax reformand focusesattention on key questions in the scholarly debate.
 

With tax reform once again on the political agenda, the American Enterprise Institute asked nine of the world’s leading tax policy scholars, including a Nobel Prize winner, to prepare papers outlining their own ideas about fundamental tax reform. After preparing these papers, the scholars gathered in Washington with the editors to discuss their differences and seek common ground.

Toward Fundamental Tax Reform provides readers with concise but varying perspectives on the possibilities of tax reform. It also focuses attention on key questions in the scholarly debate: Would a different tax code dramatically alter the functioning of the economy? How much damage does current law do? Can relatively small changes to the tax code deliver most of the benefits of more dramatic reforms such as the flat tax? Are political forces that oppose efficient tax systems simply too powerful to overcome? Will tax reform inevitably harm the poor? Can a tax reform, if enacted, be sustained?

Toward Fundamental Tax Reform collects these landmark papers in a single volume and includes two additional chapters by the editors that draw on a lively interplay that occurred among the scholars. Together, these efforts provide an invaluable and often entertaining glimpse of the future of tax reform, as well as a guide to the current thinking of our nation’s leading scholars.


Click here to view the full text and press release.

 
Table of Contents

Introduction, Alan J. Auerbach and Kevin A. Hassett
  1. A Tax System for the Twenty-first Century, David F. Bradford
  2. Tax Reform Options in the Real World, William G. Gale
  3. A Fair and Balanced Tax System for the Twenty-first Century, Michael J. Graetz
  4. Guidelines for Tax Reform: The Simple, Progressive Value-Added Consumption Tax, Robert E. Hall
  5. Would a Consumption Tax Favor the Rich? R. Glenn Hubbard
  6. Political and Economic Perspectives on Taxes’ Excess Burdens, Casey B. Mulligan
  7. A Tax Reform Caveat: In the Real World, There Is No Perfect Tax System, Ronald A. Pearlman
  8. The Elasticity of Labor Supply and the Consequences for Tax Policy, Edward C. Prescott
  9. My Beautiful Tax Reform, Joel Slemrod
Conclusion, Alan J. Auerbach and Kevin A. Hassett
 
Index
 
About the Authors
 

 
 
 
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