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NTA
NETWORK
Issue
Four,
January 2005
Contents
FROM THE NTA PRESIDENT-President's Message
Everyone seems to agree that the Annual Conference in Minneapolis was superb, and kudos go to Laura Kalambokidis for an outstanding performance as program chair, as well as to our Minnesota members who provided great local support. The panel of former Treasury Deputy Assistant Secretaries, discussing federal tax policy, spoke to a standing-room-only crowd, and the session on Minnesota issues was also a rousing success. Although I could not attend every session, based on the ones I attended and what I heard the conference was marked everywhere by excellent presentations and audience engagement. Such a successful conference was made possible by the members who organized sessions, prepared papers, and attended (forming that crucial aspect of any conference, the audience).
Mark your calendars for our next events, the Spring Symposium, May 19-20, and the State-Local Tax Program, May 20, in Washington, DC. Also look for the call for papers for the Annual Conference next fall (see notices below), to be held in Miami, November 17-19. You will receive the full call via e-mail; it is also posted on the web site (www.ntanet.org) and will be announced in the March issue of the National Tax Journal.
Another important event for NTA is the expected publication this spring of the second edition of the NTA-sponsored Encyclopedia of Taxation and Tax Policy by the Urban Institute Press. The new issue not only contains updates of the almost 200 original articles but also has more than 30 new entries. The new entries range from economic concepts (e.g., flypaper effect) to practical tax administration (such as state electronic filing), touching on new issues, such as dynamic revenue estimating, on specific taxes and provisions of the tax law, along with legal and accounting issues. The other editors join me in thanking the many members of the Association who contributed to this work and made it possible to complete the update in such a short time.
Included in this newsletter is a sneak preview of one of the new encyclopedia articles: cross-border shopping, by Don Bruce and Bill Fox. I hope you enjoy reading it and that it encourages you to purchase the new encyclopedia when it becomes available.
I also want to remind you of our call for volunteers last summer and to ask you again to let us know if you are interested in serving. We have formed a committee on student membership led by Matt Murray and Sally Wallace, and are setting up a committee to prepare for NTA’s 100th anniversary in 2007. If you are interested in serving on these committees, please let me or the Association know (jgravelle@crs.loc.gov or natltax@aol.com).
We are also interested in ideas about how to make this newsletter more useful to members, about improving technology for our operations, and on expanding membership.
Please
submit any news items for the next newsletter by March 10.
2004 Presidential Address Thomas S. Neubig, Ernst & Young LLP It
has been a privilege serving the National Tax Association as President during
the past year. NTA has been an important part of my professional career, going
back to winning an Honorable Mention in the Dissertation Prize contest. The
winner that year, 1980, is the incoming President, Jane Gravelle. NTA has
contributed to my professional growth through continued learning
opportunities, a forum to present and publish my research, and an excellent
source of networking and expanding my professional relationships. Thus, I hope
my 12 months as President have strengthened the organization so that others
will also continue to benefit from the Association. My
remarks today will focus on four areas of future opportunity for the
Association and its members. But before discussing them, I want to thank the
excellent professional staff of the Association for all that they do behind
the scenes. Fred Giertz, the NTA Executive Director, has taken steps to
energize the Association with regular Executive Committee meetings and
outreach to organizations such as the State Fiscal Analysis Initiative, the
Casey Foundation, and the Federation of Tax Administrators. I appreciate all
of the assistance provided by Joan Casey and Betty Smith, who have provided an
important institutional memory of the organization, responded to all my data
requests, and who are the day-to-day face of the organization. I also want to
thank the three program chairs this year, who made my life so easy by doing
such a great job: John McClelland of the U.S. Treasury for the Spring
Symposium, Matt Murray of the University of Tennessee for the Spring State Tax
Session, and Laura Kalambokidis of the University of Minnesota, who has done a
fantastic job organizing this fall annual meeting. I
believe there are four opportunities that could enhance the Association’s
contributions to the public policy debate as well as its members’
professional growth. The first opportunity is the interdisciplinary focus of
the Association that is so critical to effective public policy analysis. The
second opportunity is defining tax and our public policy mission broadly. The
third opportunity is focusing on both the benefits and costs sides of the
policy equation. So much of tax policy focuses only on the cost side and
ignores the benefits side. And finally, the fourth opportunity is how the
Association can help our members grow professionally not just in the technical
sense of reading and writing for the National Tax Journal and attending the conferences but also from the
informal learning through the networking and collegial give and take of
building together on what we already know. Interdisciplinary Focus The
National Tax Association is a diverse group of professionals intensely
interested in tax policy and administration. The Association faces increased
competition from the growth of many new associations and professional
societies that have narrower interests and narrower professional backgrounds.
It was inevitable with the growing importance of tax policy that this would
happen, just as the change in technology has allowed 500 different narrow
cable channels to appeal to niche markets. This increased competition could be
viewed as a threat, but competition is good and it is actually an opportunity. Instead
of narrowing our focus to compete, I believe it is essential that we celebrate
a key strength of the Association: its diversity. Good tax policy cannot, and
should not, be made only by economists or only by lawyers or only by
accountants or business or academics or even politicians. As I’ve noted
before in the NTA NETWORK, I’ve seen the damage that a solo economist can do
in the tax policy area. The best tax policy that I’ve seen generally is a
team effort from multiple disciplines with input from a wide variety of
affected parties. Clearly, any fundamental tax reforms will need to have that
broad range of insights. We
need to play to our strengths, such as holding seminars on tax policy
economics for non-economists, tax accounting implications for policy for
non-accountants, and tax law implications for policy for non-lawyers. We need
to encourage joint papers by people from different disciplines. We also need
to be sure that we are communicating to the other disciplines. As David Wessel
of the Wall Street Journal said at
the luncheon, we need to be sure that we aren’t just talking to ourselves.
Although we need to celebrate the strengths of each of our professions, if we
can’t communicate beyond our own profession, our impact on public policy
will be significantly limited. NTA
can facilitate a meaningful discussion of the issues between the business
taxpayer associations and the tax justice groups. We can increase the dialogue
between the academic community and businesses, government, and individual
taxpayers on the tax policy and administrative issues they confront. This
communication issue is critical to maintaining the diversity and effectiveness
of our Association and needs to be a focus at each conference and in each
issue of the National Tax Journal. Define Tax Broadly The
National Tax Association members bring enormous skills to a wide range of
public policy issues. Since the tax code touches every industry and seems to
be used to incent or discourage many different activities, our members have
the opportunity to add to the public policy debate on many issues beyond
simply how to raise revenue. The
tools, mindset, methods of analysis, and perspectives developed in formal and
on-the-job training in tax policy and tax administration by our members should
be used more widely, not less. We shouldn’t hesitate to fully analyze tax
expenditures. Thus, we shouldn’t hesitate to analyze direct expenditure
programs in terms of their efficiency, effectiveness, distributional effects,
administrability, compliance costs, and budgetary consequences. Our skills can
apply to the costs and effects of government regulations and credit subsidy
programs. Although
it is helpful to specialize in this increasingly complex world, there are
significant advantages to learning from and applying our existing tax policy
experience to new issues. We should not, as an association or as individual
professionals, define ourselves narrowly. Our experiences in the tax area can
help make better public policy by taking Stanley Surrey’s insights on tax
expenditures and recognize that we are already experienced in analyzing the
equivalent of direct expenditure programs, regulations, and government credit
programs, and we can do even more in these non-tax areas. It’s Not Just the Costs; It’s Also the Benefits Too
often, the public policy debate focuses only on the costs of possible tax
changes. The revenue cost dog too often wags the tax policy tail. This is
unfortunate, especially when policymakers focus on principally revenue is
aided and abetted by our profession’s willingness to estimate only the cost
of tax policy changes, while not quantifying their benefits. Sure quantifying
the benefits is difficult, but is that a reason not to try? Public policy
should be made on the basis of sound benefit-cost analyses, not just one side
of the equation. Most
analysts know that an analysis of only the tax side of Social Security is
incomplete without also including the accompanying benefits. Similarly, we
need to look at the benefit side of many additional tax issues. We need to
quantify the benefits of voluntary compliance, the benefits of simplification,
and the benefits of perceived fairness. Maybe these benefit estimates get into
political science or sociology. If they do, let’s get some political
scientists and sociologists to come to our conferences so we can tackle these
new issues together. We
can’t let the costs be defined narrowly in terms of just revenue to the
government. There is a cost to society of running large deficits, imposing
high compliance costs, and distorting economic decisions. Deficits, compliance
costs, and economic distortions do matter. They do have costs, and we need to
quantify them and effectively communicate them. When the state of Virginia
allowed local option sales tax referenda for transportation needs, we can’t
let the policy debate simply be on the costs of the additional tax without
also including the benefits from reduced congestion, or at least recognize the
current “tax” imposed on commuters from spending extra time in congestion. Foster Members’ Professional Growth The
final opportunity is how the Association can foster the professional growth of
its members. By this I mean more than just providing opportunities to come to
conferences to present or discuss papers and to read and write articles for
the National Tax Journal. The Association can play a critical role in
the networking, mentoring, and important collegial give and take of being a
tax professional Probably
the most important professional learning occurs not from the articles or
conference presentations, but from the discussions in the conference hallways,
the exchange of ideas over dinner or a few beers, or the quick e-mail between
distant colleagues who are friends. The Association can facilitate that
professional growth as well. This
year, we started a quarterly publication, the NTA NETWORK, to celebrate new
members, new promotions, new research activities, and new opportunities.
Network effects are powerful not only for Internet use, but also for
professional growth. During the coming year, a new NTA committee will focus on
student memberships so we can increase our mentoring of young tax
professionals early in their careers and provide them with volunteer and
networking opportunities. In
short, NTA members can do serious public policy analysis while also having fun
with friends and colleagues. Conclusion To
close, I see enormous opportunities and potential for the National Tax
Association. Our mission is growing, not contracting. Our interdisciplinary
membership is a strength, not a weakness. Our potential reach goes beyond just
tax to encompass many important public policy issues. Our aim should be a full
policy analysis of the issues, not just a budgetary scoring. And our goal
should be to have the Association facilitate our working together to improve
tax policy and administration. I’ve
appreciated the opportunity to serve as President of the National Tax
Association. And now I pass on the opportunities and responsibilities to my
able colleague, Jane Gravelle. ANNUAL
SPRING SYMPOSIUM NTA
has blocked a limited number of rooms at $159 (+14.5% tax). The cutoff date is April 26. The registration fee is $170 ($195 if
also attending the Friday afternoon State-Local Tax Program). You will receive
the program and forms by e-mail and
regular mail, and they will be at www.ntanet.org.
Contact James Mackie, Office of Tax Analysis, U.S. Treasury Department, at james.mackie@do.treas.gov.
NTA
will again sponsor a special program on state and local tax issues following
the annual Spring Symposium. This year’s program will focus on the political
economy of intergovernmental tax administration and compliance. The program
will have papers on the Multistate Tax Commission, International Fuel Tax, and
the Streamlined Sales Tax proposal. The program will begin with a luncheon
address by Charles E. McLure, Jr., of Stanford University. Three papers are
slated for presentation. The MTC paper will be presented by Bart
Hildreth, Matt Murray, and Dave
Sjoquist. The Streamlined Sales Tax paper will be presented by Walter Hellerstein and John
Swain. The paper on the International Fuel Tax Agreement will be presented
by Dwight Dennison and Rex
Facer. The same format as in previous years will be
followed, including roundtable discussions of the papers by leading experts in
the field of taxation from the administrative side, the compliance or business side, and the academic side. The
registration fee is $50 for just the State-Local Tax Program ($195 if also
attending the Spring Symposium). The program and forms will be available with the Symposium
program. 98TH
ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON TAXATION The 98th Annual Conference on Taxation will
cover a broad range of topics, including but not limited to taxation and tax
policies; expenditure policies, government budgeting; intergovernmental fiscal
relations; and subnational, national, and international public finance. You are invited to submit a proposal for a contributed paper or for a
complete session. Please also let us know if you would like to be
considered as a moderator or discussant
for a conference session. Decisions concerning the inclusion of papers and
sessions will be announced in June. For
details, see Call for Papers at www.ntanet.org.
Contact John Diamond, Baker Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, at jdiamond@rice.edu. Outstanding Doctoral Dissertations 36th Annual Competition DEADLINE JUNE 1, 2005
National
Tax Journal--March 2005 Contents Jorge Martinez-Vazquez
and Mark Rider, Multiple Modes of
Tax Evasion: Theory and Evidence Elizabeth T. Powers and David Neumark, The Supplemental Security Income Program and
Incentives to Claim
Social Security Retirement Early Alan L. Gustman and Thomas
L. Steinmeier, Retirement Effects of Proposals by the President’s
Commission to Strengthen Social Security Howell H. Zee, A New Approach to Taxing Financial
Intermediation Services Under a Value-Added Tax Won Ick Choi, Dankook University, South Korea
Benno Torgler, Yale Center for International & Area Studies William Voorhees, Arizona State University Randall Weiss, New York City Economic Development Corp. Roberton Williams, III, University of Texas, Austin Robert Yetman, Graduate School of Management, University of California Davis Please
send information about your recent promotions, organization changes, etc., to
natltax@aol.com
A Certificate of Excellence was awarded by TIAA-CREF to Amy Finkelstein and James Poterba for their paper “Adverse Selection in Insurance Markets: Policyholder Evidence from the U.K. Annuity Market,” published in the February 2004 issue of the Journal of Political Economy. Office
of the Revenue Analysis District
of Columbia Office of the Chief Financial Officer Fiscal Analyst
(multiple vacancies)
- A fiscal analyst may analyze and forecast the economic base, forecast tax and
non-tax revenues, project the impact of policy changes on the budget of the
District of Columbia, monitor and analyze the time series of cash receipts, and
conduct special research projects. Salary
potential is $44,129 to $112,434, depending on training and experience. How to
Apply: At http://cfo.washingtondc.gov/cfo/cwp
click on “finance positions” for information and instructions. OFFICERS President Jane G. Gravelle Vice
Presidents Robert Tannenwald Secretary Treasurer Past
Presidents Thomas S. Neubig Gary
C. Cornia ELECTED MEMBERS William H. Allaway, Jr. Leonard E. Burman Stacy Dickert-Conlin Stacey
Johnson Douglas
Lindholm Lillian
Mills Pamela
Moomau James R. Nunns Gary Sasse Daniel
N. Shaviro Eric J. Toder Sally Wallace James Wetzler Paul A. Wilson George Zodrow ADVISORY MEMBERS Harley Duncan Richard
Lavine Lynn Edward Reed Francois Vaillancourt Joan Youngman Rosanne Altshuler (9/04-8/05) Therese J. McGuire J. Fred Giertz NATIONAL
TAX ASSOCIATION 202-737-3325
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