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PRESS RELEASE FROM AMERICANS FOR TAX REFORM
Contact: John Kartch (
jkartch@atr.org or 202-785-0266)
Click
here for a copy of this file in Adobe
Acrobat
09/19/02
Just
When We Think We're Out
The AMT Pulls Us Back In
At the very moment President Bush's tax plan phases in, middle class
Americans will increasingly pay the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), negating
the effects of tax relief.
WASHINGTON -
When class-warfare politics still dominated America, Congress passed
the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), which sought to make sure that wealthy
Americans paid their "fair" share of taxes. But thirty-three
years later, that very tax is hitting the middle class - and hard.
The AMT became
law in 1969 after the American public became outraged that 155 wealthy
Americans escaped federal income taxes by taking advantage of numerous
deductions. But over the past decade, the number of filers paying AMT
increased tenfold to 1.3 million people, and the next eight years will
witness even more pronounced and explosive growth. Indeed, nearly one
out of three tax filers, or an estimated 36 million people, will be
subject to the AMT by 2010.
This tax will
be slapped on average American families largely because the AMT is not
indexed for inflation - consequently, taxes will be pushed upward through
bracket creep. Furthermore, the AMT has an extraordinarily expensive
compliance cost relative to the revenue that is generated from the tax.
While consensus is moving toward a simpler tax filing system, the AMT
acts in quite the opposite manner, forcing families to fill out two
forms, which adds approximately six additional hours of tax preparation
time.
Taxpayer advocate
Grover Norquist, who heads Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) in Washington,
said that the AMT threatens to cancel out any benefit arising from the
Bush tax cuts. "The AMT is a relic from the past, and while President
Bush's tax cuts ease the pain of taxes for working families, the AMT
will kick into effect and punish them for their hard work," he
said.
When the Bush
tax cuts become fully effective, 85 percent of taxpayers with two or
more children will have to pay the AMT instead of the regular income
tax. This tax will not target the wealthiest taxpayers as it was intended,
but instead affect hard-working middle-class families that could be
making as little as $75,000 per year.
"This is
a classic case of Congress not wanting to kill a cash cow," continued
Norquist, "even when the cow has horns pointed at millions of Americans
who were never supposed to be milked. President Clinton refused to even
index this tax for inflation, which is the least that Congress can do
for American taxpayers."
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Americans for Tax Reform is a non-partisan
coalition of taxpayers and taxpayer groups who oppose any and all federal
and state tax increases. For
more information, or to arrange an interview with Mr. Norquist please contact John Kartch at (202)785-0266 or by email at
jkartch@atr.org.
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