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Limiting the tax deductibility of charitable contributions would effectively transfer more than $7 billion a year from charitable institutions to the federal government.
The authors propose a simple change to tax law that would cut unproductive health spending, reduce the number of uninsured, and promote greater tax fairness.
In less than twenty-five years, government “affordable housing” and other housing policies have turned a healthy market into a financial ruin. Until Fannie and Freddie’s market dominance and the government’s role in the housing finance system are substantially reduced or eliminated, the United States will continue to have an inferior and unstable housing market.
This Outlook outlines six simple—and bipartisan—changes to the tax code that can help the country move toward a tax code aimed towards economic growth and away from complex regulations and political favoritism.
Tax Analysts' Martin A. Sullivan recently sat down with Alex Brill, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, to discuss his tax reform plan, which he hopes can win bipartisan support.
One of the biggest threats to the nation's future prosperity is the continuing explosion in our nation's health-care costs.
Government regulation of the compensation levels of key personnel could destroy the value of the same firms in which the government has the greatest stake.
R. Glenn Hubbard, John F. Cogan, and Daniel P. Kessler propose reforms of health care taxation, health market regulation, consumer information, and the medical malpractice system.





