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Issue
Seven,
October 2005
Contents
PRESIDENT'S
MESSAGE
I
would like to express my concern for our colleagues whose lives were disrupted
by the recent hurricanes. I’m sure
all of your friends in NTA join me in expressing our sympathy and best wishes as
you cope with the disaster.
As you may know, Congress has, in addition to passing a spending package
to address the effects of Katrina, provided a package of tax relief that
includes eliminating floors on the casualty loss deduction, extending the
reinvestment period for involuntary conversions, allowing penalty free
withdrawals from retirement plans and IRAs, allowing claims for the child credit
and EIC based on 2004 returns, and some other provisions.
They are now considering enterprise-zone like legislation. This
newsletter includes a brief summary of information available about this
legislation, with links to useful documents the federal response to the
hurricane damage.
I hope many of you will be joining us in
Miami
for the annual meetings, November 17-19.
John Diamond and his committee have done a wonderful job of putting the
program together. Our luncheon
speaker, Jim Poterba, and our tax reform panel will discuss the work of the
President’s Advisory Panel on Tax Reform, a timely topic.
Please check the program on the NTA website, http://www.ntanet.org/.
I would especially like to call your attention to our special student
initiative which includes a student panel session and a student research forum.
We are indebted to Matt Murray for putting this part of the program
together. The future of NTA depends
on recruiting and welcoming out future scholars.
I hope also that many of you will come to our business meeting which is
sometimes lightly attended.
This
meeting involves more than attending to the operating business of the
organization (electing new officers, reviewing financial status).
It is also the occasion of the presentation of the
Holland
medal to Roy Bahl, who has
done so much to advance knowledge in our profession.
On a more personal note, my address will be on “The Intersection
between Policy Analysis and Academic Research” - and I am eager to hear your
thoughts as well.
The
encyclopedia has gone to the printer and should be available soon.
I also wish to express my appreciation to Pam Moomau, who has agreed to
serve as editor of NTA Network. One
of my goals has been to increase the frequency and scope of our newsletter.
Please contact Pam at Pamela.Moomau@mail.house.gov
with any suggestions for the newsletter.
Jane
Gravelle
See
you in Miami
John
Diamond
Don't
forget about the upcoming 98th Annual Conference
November 17-19, 2005
at the Hyatt Regency in
Miami
,
Florida
.
The program committee has done an excellent job of putting together an
interesting and varied program. There
are several new sessions that I am sure many of you will find of special
interest. These include a session
on trends in teaching public economics/finance, a student session, and a
student research forum (similar to a poster session). We
are delighted to have Professor James M. Poterba as the keynote speaker on
Thursday, November 17th. The
conference rate at the hotel is guaranteed through today,
October
21, 2005
. For more
information about conference registration or the conference program please go
to the NTA webpage. (http://www.ntanet.org/)
Recent Writings in Tax Policy: Rebuilding After Katrina
Pam Moomau
Although
the news-cycle has started to move past the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina,
plans for recovery are just getting underway.
Introducing a new feature in the NTA
Network, this column provides a link to some recent commentary on the
economic impacts of Hurricane Katrina, and on the role of tax policy in the
Katrina recovery effort. The
long-run plan for this column is to provide a forum for notification of any
recent writings in tax policy by our members and their institutions.
The Congressional Budget Office has produced several reports documenting
estimates of hurricane damage, and loss of jobs and capital stock due to
Hurricanes Rita and Katrina, and discussing the likely effects of these storms
on the national economy. The most
recent of these is Macroeconomic and
Budgetary Effects of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Statement of Douglas Holtz-Eakin
before the Committee on the Budget of the
U.S.
House of Representatives,
October
6, 2005
(http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=6684&sequence=0).
This document also describes recent spending and tax legislation that
has been enacted to provide immediate relief to areas affected by Hurricane
Katrina.
A
detailed description of the tax relief legislation already enacted may be
found in Technical Explanation of H.R.
3768, The “Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2000” as passed by the
House and Senate on September 21, 2005 (http://www.house.gov/jct/x-69-05.pdf)
and a table showing the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates of the revenue
effects of the legislation in Estimated
Revenue Effects of the House Resolution of Concurrence with and Amendment to
the Senate Amendment to H.R. 3768, the “Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of
2005” (http://www.house.gov/jct/x-68-05.pdf).
Legislation
enacted so far may be just the opening act to legislation affecting Katrina
relief and the rebuilding of the gulf coast.
The massive challenge presented by this task raises many questions
about the desirability and effectiveness of policies to encourage development
and provide assistance within specific locations.
The Senate Finance Committee held two hearings on this subject, with
witnesses including state and local officials from the affected areas on the
effects of the storm and the types of assistance they need, and from federal
officials on contemplated tax policy. This
testimony from September 28 may be found at http://finance.senate.gov/sitepages/hearing092805.htm
and from October 6 at http://finance.senate.gov/sitepages/hearing100605.htm.
The Testimony of George K. Yin,
Chief of Staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation at the Hearing of the Senate
Finance Committee on “Hurricane Katrina: Community Rebuilding Needs and
Effectiveness of Past Proposals” (http://www.house.gov/jct/x-70-05.pdf)
describes former tax legislation that has been enacted in connection with
recent disasters.
The Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program has published a
description of issues of geography and longstanding state, local, and federal
policies that combined to exacerbate the flood damage and loss in
New Orleans
in
New
Orleans
After the Storm: Lessons from the
Past, a Plan for the Future (http://www.brookings.edu/metro/pubs/20051012_NewOrleans.htm).
This document also provides the broad outlines of a reconstruction approach
that involves a major reconfiguration of federal, state, and local approaches
to land-use and poverty relief policies. Another
Metropolitan Policy Program article, Katrina’s Window: Confronting Concentrated Poverty Across America,
by Alan Berube and Bruce Katz (http://www.brookings.edu/metro/pubs/20051012_concentratedpoverty.htm)
extends the approach to rebuilding after Katrina to suggestions for
re-thinking location-based subsidies in general.
Tax policy discussion in these articles centers around creative use of
tax credits for housing and expansion of the earned income tax credit.
The Heritage Foundation’s How to Turn the President’s Gulf Coast Pledge into Reality, by
Stuart M. Butler, et. al. (http://www.heritage.org/Research/GovernmentReform/wm848.cfm)
puts more focus on providing investment incentives through reducing tax and
regulatory costs of capital, but also provides some commentary on the best way
to approach the housing shortage caused by Katrina.
In
the CRS Report Tax Policy Options After
Katrina, Updated
October
6, 2005
(http://www.congress.gov/erp/rl/pdf/rl33088.pdf),
Jane Gravelle provides an overview of the possible roles for tax policy in
Katrina recovery, ranging from national income and energy subsidies to
Katrina-specific policies. This
article points out the distinction between policies aimed at helping the
individual victims of Katrina, versus policies designed to promote rebuilding
the area, and poses the question as to whether location-based policies
originally designed to relieve economic distress in low-income areas could be
gainfully used to rebuild after a disaster.
For
future columns, please send me an email providing links to any recent research
or writings in tax policy you would like to share at Pamela.Moomau@mail.house.gov.
Welcome New Members--Fall
2005
David
Ackerman, San Diego Bookkeeping,
San Diego
,
CA
Steven Bank, UCLA
School
of
Law
,
Los
Angeles
,
CA
Tim Bastian, Rain For Rent,
Bakersfield
,
CA
Mark Beshears, Sprint-Nextel Corporation,
Overland Park
,
KS
Per Callesen, Ministry of Finance, Christiansborg,
Copenhagen
,
Denmark
Duanjie Chen,
University
of Toronto
,
Ontario
Kimberly Clausing,
Reed
College
,
Portland
,
OR
Don DePascal, PalmSource, Inc.
Sunnyvale
,
CA
Rachel Ferst,
Reed
College
,
Portland
,
OR
Ellen Frank,
Rhode
Island
College
,
School
of
Social
Work
,
Providence
,
RI
Thomas L Hungerford, CRS Library of Congress,
Washington
,
DC
Jill
Larson
,
Minnesota
Business Partnership,
Minneapolis
,
MN
Peter S. Lee, National Headquarters Office of Research, IRS,
Washington
,
DC
Irma J. Mosquera Val Derram,
University
of
Groningen
, The
Netherlands
Brian Osoba,
University
of
Texas
,
El Paso
,
TX
Kristyn Pearce, Rain For Rent,
Bakersfield
,
CA
Russell
Rollyson, West Virginia State Auditor’s Office
Jacob Russin,
Dewey Ballantine,
London
,
England
Astrid Silva,
Florida
A&M College of Law,
Orlando
,
FL
Stephen Utkus, Vanguard,
Malvern
,
PA
Phillip Waldrop, Rain for Rent,
Bakersfield
,
CA
Richard Winchester,
Thomas
Jefferson
School
of Law,
San Diego
,
CA
Members
on the Move
John Anderson, Council
of Economic Advisors
C. Bryan Cloyd, Virginia Polytechnic Institute,
Blacksburg
,
VA
Stacy Dickert-Conlin,
Michigan
State
University
Jay Ladin,
Bloomington
,
IN
Byron Lutz, Federal
Reserve Board,
Washington
,
DC
Norbert Michel,
Nicholls
State
University
,
Thibodaux
, L
Please
send information about your recent promotions, organization changes, etc., to
natltax@aol.com
Job
Openings
Job Announcements have been edited for space. Please use
listed contacts to obtain additional information about the positions and
selection criteria.
The World Bank:
Europe
and
Central Asia
Region - Poverty Reduction and Economic Management
Senior Public Sector
Specialist - Revenue Administration
Language Preferences: Russian
Selection Criteria:
Advanced degree in law, management, finance, public
administration, management information systems, or other educational
background associated with demonstrated and relevant experience in revenue
collection. A strong grasp of politics and political economy in
developing country settings would be expected.
At least ten years of relevant experience with significant experience
in the application of revenue collection measures in developing countries.
Knowledge of World Bank operations policies and procedures in general
and procurement policies and procedures in particular would be a significant
advantage.
Contact:
Deborah L. Wetzel Manager- Public Sector and Institutional Reform
Europe
and
Central Asia
Region The World Bank
1818 H St., NW
,
Washington
,
DC
20433
Tel: 202-473-1698, Fax: 202-522-2753
e-mail: dwetzel@worldbank.org
Erickson
School
of Aging Studies
University
of
Maryland
,
Baltimore
County
(UMBC)
The
Erickson
School
offers interdisciplinary
education in aging, aging services and business aspects of an aging society.
Applicants should have training and interests in the areas of aging and policy
and/or aging and business and/or aging and practice that will enable teaching
and an active, applied research program related to policy, business or
practice in the governmental, non-profit and for-profit sectors of aging
services.
Assistant
Professor, Aging Services
Qualifications:
A Ph.D. or other
terminal degree in a discipline related to the social, behavioral, business,
human services and/or policy dimensions of aging is expected.
Evidence of research reflecting integration of asic and/or applied
research with business, practice or state and federal policy is preferred.
Associate Dean for Research, Policy and Practice,
Erickson
School
of Aging Studies. This is a full-time, tenure/tenure track faculty
position at the level of Associate/Full Professor.
Qualifications:
A terminal degree
(e.g., Ph.D., DSW, MD, LLM) in a discipline related to the social, behavioral,
human services and/or policy dimensions of aging is required with at least ten
years experience in conducting research applicable to aging, aging
services/practice or aging policy. The successful candidate must have a
national/international reputation, including a strong record of funded studies
and scholarly publications. Evidence of integration of basic and/or applied
research with a practice setting and/or state and federal policy is preferred.
Demonstrated communication and team building skills are required, as well as a
strong record of teaching and mentoring students and colleagues. The
successful applicant will be eligible for tenure in one of several appropriate
academic departments.
Salary is commensurate with qualifications and experience.
Application
Process/ Contact:
For best
consideration, submit a cover lever, resume and contact information for three
professional references by November 1, 2005 to:
Director Search Committee: Erickson School of Aging Studies UMBC PUP218
1000 Hilltop Circle Baltimore MD 21250
Review of application materials will begin on November 1, 2005 and continue
until the position is filled.
UMBC is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Women, minorities and individuals with disabilities are encouraged to
apply.
Associate Dean for
Research, Policy and Practice, Erickson School of Aging Studies
University of Maryland Baltimore County invites applicants for the position of
Assistant Professor.
For complete details see: http://www.umbc.edu/hr/employment/index.html
and select Faculty positions.
Illinois Department of Revenue
Economist (Public
Service Administrator - 2(c)
The Illinois
Department of Revenue is seeking to fill 3 Revenue Analyst positions in its
Chicago office.
Description
of Duties
Under
administrative direction, an Economist independently performs and coordinates
economic and fiscal analytical studies on economic and fiscal conditions
throughout the State of Illinois; compiles data and analysis into reports that
are submitted to the Director of Revenue, the Governor's Office, the
Comptroller's Office, and the General Assembly; analyzes proposed, pending and
new legislation for its impact on fiscal policy and on current and future
levels of tax receipts, and in coordination with others areas of the
Department determines the possible administrative effects of the legislation;
serves as liaison to other state agencies, providing Department data and
interpretation of that data for purposes of both short term and long term
analysis of various policy proposals; serves as the Department's
representative on both internal and external committees and groups researching
or analyzing state economic and fiscal policy issues.
Qualifications:
Requires a strong background in quantitative and research methods; a Master's
degree in economics or a related field (public administration, public policy,
urban planning, etc.); and three years of professional experience in economic
research and/or policy analysis.
For
More Information:
Contact Natalie Davila, Research Director, 312-814-1777 or NDAVILA@revenue.state.il.us
You can visit the
Illinois Department website at http://www.revenue.state.il.us/AboutIdor/economists.htm
where other employment opportunities are available.
YOUR
NTA BOARD AND STAFF WORKING FOR YOU
OFFICERS
President
Jane G. Gravelle
Congressional Research Service
Library of Congress
101 Independence Avenue SE
Washington DC 20540
jgravelle@crs.loc.gov
Vice
Presidents
Joel Slemrod
Stephen
M. Ross School of Business
University of Michigan
701 Tappan Street
Ann Arbor MI 48109-1234
jslemrod@umich.edu
Robert Tannenwald
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
600 Atlantic Avenue
Boston MA 02210
robert.tannenwald@bos.frb.org
Acting
Secretary
Charmaine
J. Wright
National Tax Association
725 15th Street
NW #600
Washington
DC
20005-2109
202-737-3325/natltax@aol.com
Treasurer
Richard
F. Dye
(9/04-8/05)
Dept.
of Economics
Lake Forest College
Lake Forest, IL 60045
dye@lfc.edu
Past
Presidents
Thomas S. Neubig
Ernst
& Young LLP
1225 Connecticut Avenue NW
Washington DC 20036
tom.neubig@ey.com
Gary
C. Cornia
Marriott
School of Management
Brigham Young University
730 TNRB
Provo UT 84602
gary_cornia@byu.edu
ELECTED MEMBERS
William H. Allaway, Jr.
Texas Taxpayers & Research Association
400 West 15th Street Suite
400
Austin TX 78701
ballaway@ttara.org
Leonard E. Burman
The Urban Institute
2100 M Street NW
Washington DC 20037
lburman@ui.urban.org
Stacy
Dickert-Conlin
Department of Economics
Michigan State University
110 Marshall-Adams Hall
East Lansing, MI
dickertc@msu.edu
Stacey
Johnson
Iowa Taxpayers Association
431 East Locust, #300
Des Moines IA 50309
sjohnson@iowataxpayers.org
Douglas
Lindholm
Council
on State Taxation
122 C Street NW #330
Washington DC 20001-2109
dlindholm@statetax.org
Lillian
Mills
University of Arizona
301 McClelland Hall
Tucson, AZ 85718
lmills@u.arizona.edu
Pamela
Moomau
Joint Committee on Taxation
1015 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington DC 20515
pamela.moomau@mail.house.gov
James R. Nunns
Office
of Tax Analysis
U.S. Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania NW #4043
Washington DC 20220
james.nunns@do.treas.gov
Gary Sasse
RIPEC
300 Richmond Street #200
Providence RI 02903
g_sasse@ripec.com
Daniel
N. Shaviro
New York University Law School
40 Washington Square So.
New York NY 10012-1099
shavirod@juris.law.nyu.edu
Eric J. Toder
The
Urban Institute
2100 M Street NW
Washington DC 20037
etoder@ui.urban.org
Sally Wallace
Andrew
Young School of Policy Studies
Georgia State University
University Plaza
Atlanta GA 30303
swallace@gsu.edu
James Wetzler
Deloitte Tax LLP
2 World Financial Center
New York NY 10281
jwetzler@deloitte.com
Paul A. Wilson
Minnesota House of Representatives
328 State Office Building
St. Paul MN 55155
paul.wilson@house.mn
George Zodrow
Rice Scholar
Baker Institute for Public Policy
Rice University
6100 Main Street, MS-22
Houston, TX 77005-1892
zodrow@rice.edu
ADVISORY MEMBERS
Harley Duncan
Federation
of Tax Administrators
444 North Capitol NW #348
harley.duncan@taxadmin.org
Richard
Lavine
Center for Public Policy Priorities
900 Lydia Street
Austin TX 78702-2625
lavine@cppp.org
Lynn Edward Reed
Minnesota
Taxpayers Association
85 East 7th Place #250
St. Paul MN 55101-2173
lreed@mntax.org
Francois Vaillancourt
Department
of Economics
University of Montreal
PO Box 6128 Station A
Montreal Quebec H3C 3J7
francois.vaillancourt@umontreal.ca
Joan Youngman
Lincoln
Institute of Land Policy
113 Brattle Street
Cambridge MA 02138-3400
jyoungman@lincolninst.edu
NATIONAL TAX JOURNAL
Rosanne Altshuler
Dept.
of Economics
Rutgers University
New Brunswick, NJ
altshule@rci.rutgers.edu
Therese J. McGuire
Kellogg
School of Management
Northwestern University
2001 Sheridan Road
Evanston IL 60208
therese-mcguire@northwestern.edu
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
J. Fred Giertz
Institute
of Government & Public Affairs
University of Illinois
1007 W. Nevada
Urbana IL 61801
jgiertz@ad.uiuc.edu
NATIONAL
TAX ASSOCIATION
725
15TH STREET NW
#600
WASHINGTON
DC 20005
202-737-3325
natltax@aol.com
www.ntanet.org
Staff:
Charmaine
J. Wrightt,
Betty
Smith
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