Updated 11/24/08
The Skewed Benefits of the Tax Cuts: With the Tax Cuts Extended, Top 1 Percent of Households Would Receive Almost $1.2 Trillion in Tax Benefits over the Next Decade
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
Revised 7/21/08
Evidence Shows That Tax Cuts Lose Revenue
Revised 5/9/08
Tax Cuts: Myths and Realities
Revised3/28/08
Extending the President’s Tax Cuts and AMT Relief Would Cost $4.4 Trillion Through 2018
3/27/08
Long-Term Social Security Shortfall Smaller Than Cost of Extending Tax Cuts for Top 1 Percent
3/12/08
Fact-Checking This Week’s Budget Resolution Debate
3/11/08
Have the 2001 and 2003 Tax Cuts Made the Tax Code More Progressive?
Revised 2/20/07
Why the Cost of AMT Relief Should Be Included in Estimates of the Cost of Extending the President’s Tax Cuts
Revised 7/27/06
Claim That Tax Cuts "Pay For Themselves" Is Too Good to Be True: Data Show No "Free Lunch" Here
Revised 1/31/05
CBO Data Show Tax Cuts Have Played Much Larger Role Than Domestic Spending Increases In Fueling The Deficit
Revised 9/13/04
Studies Shed New Light on Effects of Administration’s Tax Cuts
6/2/04
The Ultimate Burden of the Tax Cuts
Press Release | Summary
Revised 4/23/04
Tax Returns: A Comprehensive Assessment of the Bush Administration’s Record on Cutting Taxes
» Press Release
» Comments by economist William Gale