8/29/08
Big Misconceptions About Small Business and Taxes
8/7/08
Few of the 2001 and 2003 Tax Cut Provisions Benefit Families With Modest Incomes
1/15/08
Another Misdiagnosis: Marginal Rate Reductions and Extensions of Tax Cuts Expiring in 2010 Not the Right Medicine for the Economy’s Current Ills
4/13/07
CBO Provides New Evidence That the 2001 and 2003 Tax Cuts Have Only Modest Economic Effects and Do Not Pay For Themselves
3/19/07
Economic Effects of the Pay-As-You-Go Rule
2/1/07
Two High Income Tax Cuts Not Yet Fully in Effect Will Cost Billions Over the Next Five Years: Freezing the Tax Cuts at 2007 Levels Would Yield Significant Savings
1/31/07
Extending the President’s Tax Cuts and AMT Relief Would Cost $3.5 Trillion Through 2017
8/8/06
New CBO Deficit Estimate Indicates That Without The Tax Cuts, the Budget Would Be Balanced
8/2/06
Putting Their Cards on the Table: Senate Budget Bill Indicates Intention to Pay for Tax Cuts by Sweeping Cuts in Programs for Middle- and Low-Income Households
Revised 7/31/06
Pension Conference Agreement Makes Retirement Tax Cuts Permanent But Fails To Offset Their Cost: Measure Could Set Precedent for Other Unpaid-for Tax-Cut Extensions
Revised 7/31/06
CBPP Statement: Pension Conference Agreement Sets Undesirable Precedent for Extending Tax Cuts Permanently without Paying for Them
7/17/06
Pension Bill Conference Report May Make Some 2001 Tax Cuts Permanent without Offsetting Their Costs: Bill Could Set Precedent for Other Unpaid-For Tax-Cut Extensions
Revised 7/17/06
Saver's Credit For Moderate-Income Families Would Fade Away Over Time Under House-Passed Pension Bill
Revised 6/14/06
Claim That Tax Cuts "Pay For Themselves" Is Too Good To Be True: Data Show No "Free Lunch" Here
4/10/06
Recent Tax and Income Trends Among High-Income Taxpayers
Revised 1/6/06
House Pension Bill Would Make Some 2001 Tax Cuts Permanent For The First Time
12/28/05
Two Tax Cuts Primarily Benefiting Millionaires Will Start Taking Effect January 1; Congress Declines to Rethink These Tax Cuts As It Proposes to Cut Aid to Low-Income Families
9/19/05
Should Impending Upper-Income Tax Cuts be Implemented While Katrina Costs Mount and Other Domestic Programs May be Cut?
Revised 2/24/05
Two Tax Cuts That Benefit Only High-Income Households —Primarily Millionaires — Slated to Start Taking Effect In 2006: Will These Tax Cuts Be Implemented While Basic Programs for the Working Poor and Other Families Are Cut?
1/25/05
The Simple Story: Tax Cuts Lose Revenues
Revised 3/22/04
Too Good To Be True: Tax Cuts Do Not Pay For Themselves
Revised 9/28/04
Many Middle-Class Families Likely To Wind Up As Net Losers From The "Middle-Class" Tax-Cut Legislation

» Fact Sheet
7/21/03
New Treasury Tax Cut Examples Mislead More Than They Inform
Revised 6/1/03
Tax Cut Law Leaves Out 8 Million Filers Who Pay Income Taxes
5/28/03
Brookings Economists Find Magnitude Of Gimmicks In New Tax Law Represents Sharp Departure From The Past
2/27/04
Budget Rule Change Would Make The Cost Of Extending The Tax Cuts Disappear
5/28/03
Administration Continues To Rely On Misleading Use Of "Averages" To Describe Tax-Cut Benefits
Revised 5/14/03
New Joint Committee On Taxation Study Finds Negative Long-Term Economic Effects From House Tax Bill
4/17/03
The Administration's Tax Cut Blitz: Assessing The Message
Revised 3/19/03
The Administration's Tax Cuts And The Long-term Budget Outlook
Revised 1/28/03
President's Own Example Shows Bulk of Tax Package Irrelevant to Middle-Income Americans
1/6/03
Principles for Economic Stimulus
1/22/02
Criticisms of Kennedy Tax Proposal Ignore its Substance and Distort its Impact
5/3/01
Reduction of Top Rate Costs $237 Billion Over Ten Years, Even Though Fewer Than 1% of Filers Are in The Top Bracket
4/19/01
The Bush Tax Cut Is Now about the Same Size As the Reagan Tax Cuts
Revised 3/16/01
Income Tax Rates and High-Income Taxpayers: How Strong is the Case for Major Rate Reductions?
» Summary
» Fact Sheet
3/15/01
Marginal Tax Rate Reductions and the Economy: What Would Be the Long-Term Effects of the Bush Tax Cut?
Revised 3/9/01
New Treasury Distributional Table Departs Sharply from Previous Treasury Methodology: New Table Understates Gains to the Top and Overstates Gains for the Rest; Fuller Assessment Shows Gains Concentrated at the Top
Revised 2/6/01
Taking Down the Toll Booth to the Middle Class? Myth and Reality Governing the Bush Tax Plan and Lower-income Working Families