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Reproduced
with permission from the Urban
Institute. The AMT: Out of Control Author(s):
Leonard E.
Burman, William G.
Gale, Jeff
Rohaly, Benjamin H.
Harris Presented:
2003 IRS
Research Conference, June 2003 Published:
September 18,
2002 The views
expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the
Urban Institute, its trustees, or
its funders. No. 5
in the Series,
"Tax Policy Issues and Options" The practice of
requiring well-to-do Americans to pay a minimum tax was developed more
than three decades
ago. In January 1969, then-Treasury Secretary Joseph W. Barr
informed Congress that
155 individual taxpayers with incomes exceeding $200,000 had paid no
federal income tax in
1966. The news set off a political firestorm. Members of Congress were
deluged with more
constituent letters about the untaxed 155 in 1969 than about the Vietnam
War. Later that year,
Congress created a minimum tax to prevent wealthy individuals from taking
undue advantage of tax
laws to reduce or eliminate their federal income tax
liability. Historically,
both the original minimum tax and the individual alternative minimum tax
(AMT) that replaced it
applied to only a small minority of high-income households. But under
current law, this "class tax" will
soon be a "mass tax." Current projections show the number of AMT
taxpayers skyrocketing
from 1 million in 1999 to 36 million in 2010. Without reform, virtually
all uppermiddle- class families
with two or more children will be paying the AMT by decade's end.
This expansion will
occur because the AMT is not indexed for inflation and because the 2001
tax cut reduced the
regular income tax without making long-term cuts to the
AMT. The steep growth
in the AMT would not justify alarm if it made taxation more fair,
efficient, and simple. But the
AMT's record on fairness and efficiency is mixed, and its structure is
notoriously complex. For
these reasons, the AMT must be reformed, if not eliminated, even though
fixing the AMT will be
expensive. Indeed, by the decade's end, repealing the AMT will cost the
Treasury more than
repealing the regular income tax. How did a tax
originally designed to target 155 taxpayers grow so dramatically? What are
the economics of the
AMT? And what are the options for reform? How the AMT
Works Taxpayers
subject to the AMT must calculate their tax liability twice: once under
regular income tax rules and
again under AMT rules. If liability under the AMT proves higher, taxpayers
pay the difference as a
surcharge to the regular tax. Technically, the difference paid is their
AMT. To calculate
their AMT, taxpayers add to their regular taxable income two categories of
items called AMT
preferences. Exemption preferences, which can be deducted from
income under the regular income
tax, are disallowed in the AMT. These items include personal exemptions,
the standard
deduction, and itemized deductions for state taxes and miscellaneous
expenses. Middle-income
AMT taxpayers are the most likely to be hit by exemption
preferences. Deferral
preferences allow taxpayers
to postpone regular income tax payments by hastening deductions or
delaying income recognition. The AMT rules limit the extent to which
taxpayers can use deferrals
by, for example, allowing less generous depreciation deductions. Compared
with exemption
preferences, deferral preferences are more complex, tend to affect
high-income filers, and generate
less AMT revenue. Once taxpayers
add in all applicable preferences and tally income, they subtract the
AMT exemption—currently
$49,000 for married couples and $35,750 for singles. The resulting
income level is taxed
at flatter rates than under the regular income tax. The statutory
AMT tax rate of 26 percent applies
to the first $175,000 of net income above the exemption. For income over
that level, a 28
percent tax rate applies. (Under the regular income tax, the same income
would be taxed at rates
ranging from 10.0 percent to 38.6 percent in 2002.) Many taxpayers'
effective AMT rate, however,
is significantly higher, because the exemption phases out at a 25 percent
rate over higher income
ranges. The AMT parameters are not indexed for inflation.1 For a simple
example of one family's
AMT calculations, see the
box. "Class Tax"
to "Mass Tax" Under current
law, the number of AMT taxpayers will soar over the next decade. The
dramatic rise can be
traced to prior changes, or lack thereof, in the regular income tax and
the AMT. Most major tax
legislation since 1980 has included changes in the AMT that broadly
conform to the reforms made in
the regular income tax. Two notable exceptions, however, are the last two
major tax cuts, which
slashed the regular income tax without making conforming changes to the
AMT. The Economic
Recovery Tax Act of 1981 indexed the regular tax system for inflation but
did not do the same for
the AMT. The Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of
2001 (EGTRRA) cut the
regular income tax, but only made minor or temporary AMT
adjustments. Under current
law, about 36 million people will be on the AMT by 2010, almost 14 times
as many as in 2001.
Without EGTRRA, the number of AMT taxpayers in 2010 would have been about
18 million. If the
AMT had been indexed for inflation along with the regular income tax in
1981, and if EGTRRA had not
been enacted in 2001, only about 300,000 people would have to pay the
AMT in 2010 (figure
1). The focus of the
tax will also shift, with a greater share of the middle class paying the
AMT. In 2002, 1.4
percent of filers with incomes between $50,000 and $75,000 and 3 percent
with incomes between
$75,000 and $100,000 will face the AMT (all income classes are measured
in 2001 dollars).
By 2010, those figures jump to 43 and 79 percent, respectively
(table
1). Calculating
the Bradys' AMT The Bradys, a
married couple with six children, have an income of $75,000
from salaries,
interest, and dividends. Under the regular income tax, the Bradys can
deduct $24,000 in
personal exemptions for themselves and their children. They can also
claim a $7,850
standard deduction. For the regular tax, their taxable income of
$43,150 places them in
the 15 percent tax bracket, and they owe $5,873 in taxes
before calculating the
AMT (or tax credits, which are allowed against both the AMT and
the regular tax in
2002).2 To calculate AMT
liability, the couple adds their preference
items—personal exemptions of
$24,000 and the standard deduction of $7,850—to taxable income
and subtracts the
married-couple exemption of $49,000, yielding $26,000 in income
subject to AMT. That
amount is taxed at the lower AMT rate of 26 percent, for a tentative
AMT liability of
$6,760. The AMT equals the difference between the couple's tentative
AMT and their
regular income tax, or $887. Several points
about this example are worth noting. First, the Bradys are on the
AMT because they
have a large family, not because they are rich or aggressive
tax shelterers.
Second, the Bradys' AMT situation is about as simple as it gets; they
have no deferral preferences, no itemized deductions, no
capital gains, no AMT credits from previous years, and no other complicating factors.
Third, the Bradys will receive no long-term benefit from the 2001 tax rate reductions,
because their income tax liability is set by the AMT, not the regular income
tax.3 Finally, as long as the AMT is not indexed to inflation, the Bradys' future tax payments as a
share of their income will rise, even if their real (inflation-adjusted) income does not
change. BOX 1. AMT Calculation for the Bradys Married couple, filing jointly, with 6 children,
2002 Calculate Regular Tax (before AMT) Calculate
Tentative AMT Gross income $75,000 Taxable income $43,150 Subtract deductions Add preference items 8 personal exemptions @ Personal $3,000 each - $24,000 exemptions + $24,000 Standard deduction - $7,850 Standard deduction +
$7,850 Taxable income =$43,150 AMTI
=$75,000 Tax $5,873 Subtract AMT exemption
- $49,000 (Tax bracket) 15% Taxable
under AMT =$26,000 Tax (tentative AMT) $6,760 (AMT tax bracket) 26% Tax first $12,000 is taxed at 10% next $34,700 is taxed at 15% next $66,150 is taxed at 27% AMT = the excess of tentative AMT over regular income
tax AMT = $6,760 - 5,873 = $887 The AMT will become the de facto tax system for
filers with incomes between $100,000 and $500,000: 95 percent of these taxpayers will face the
AMT in 2010. At higher income levels, the share of taxpayers on the AMT falls, because the top
AMT rate is lower than the top regular tax rate. Even so, in 2010, most filers with incomes
between $500,000 and $1 million, and more than one-quarter of tax filers with incomes above $1
million, will pay the AMT. In particular, the tax will hammer families with
children and those that live in high-tax states. The AMT does not allow parents to claim exemptions for
their children. In addition, it imposes marriage penalties, because the exemption for couples
is less than twice the level for singles, and the tax rate brackets are not adjusted for marital
status. By the end of the decade, couples will be more than 20 times as likely as singles to pay the
AMT (not shown in the table). Among married taxpayers with two or more children, 85 percent will
face the AMT in 2010, including 99 percent of such families with incomes between $75,000 and
$500,000. Because the AMT does not allow deductions for state taxes, filers in high-tax states
are also more likely to face the AMT. The 2001 tax cut will double a person's odds of being
on the AMT by 2010. Before EGTRRA, 16 percent of taxpayers were slated to pay the AMT in
2010; post-EGTRRA, 33 percent will pay AMT. The 2001 law raised the likelihood of AMT
liability by nearly 18 percentage points for filers with incomes between $50,000 and $75,000 and by
between 40 and 54 percentage points for filers with incomes between $75,000 and $1 million.
In addition, by 2010, EGTRRA will more than double the share of adjusted gross income (AGI)
subject to the AMT, from 26 percent to 55 percent, and the law will triple the cost of
eliminating the AMT, from $47 billion to $141 billion. Indeed, by 2008, repealing the AMT would cost more
than repealing the regular income tax. As these figures show, EGTRRA worsened the AMT
problem. Ironically, the AMT will also undermine the tax cut. By 2010, the AMT will "take
back" about 36 percent of the overall income tax cut enacted through EGTRRA, including more than
70 percent of the cut targeted to taxpayers with incomes between $100,000 and
$500,000. Fairness The original purpose of the AMT was to reduce the
number of high-income households that paid no federal income tax in a given year and to address
overall fairness concerns, especially those related to aggressive or egregious tax sheltering
schemes. In minimizing the number of nontaxpaying high-income households, the AMT has been a success.
Partly because of the AMT, the number of high-income filers that pay no income tax
has not changed much since 1970. In 2001, an estimated 100 tax filers with incomes above $1
million paid no federal income tax, but at least 700 high-income tax filers owed no income tax before
the AMT. The number paying no income taxes under AMT repeal would have been even higher if
AMT repeal led to more tax sheltering activity. More broadly, the AMT raises the overall
progressivity of the income tax, though both the regular income tax and the AMT will become less progressive
over time. The regular tax's progressivity will decline because the 2001 tax cuts increasingly
benefit higher-income taxpayers over the course of the decade. The AMT will also become less progressive, with
millions of middle-class families becoming subject to it. Filers with incomes under $100,000
will account for 53 percent of AMT taxpayers in 2010, up from 24 percent in 2002. Those filers will
account for 24 percent of AMT revenues, compared with 8 percent in 2002. Only 9 percent of
AMT revenues will come from taxpayers with incomes above $500,000 in 2010, compared with 33
percent in 2002. That income group will account for 30 percent of income tax revenues in 2002
and 26 percent in 2010. Thus, the AMT's ability to boost the progressivity of the income tax
and the estate tax will erode just as the AMT becomes more and more burdensome to the middle
class. TABLE 1. AMT Projections AMT Participation Current Lawa Pre-EGTRRA Law 2002 2010 2010 Percent of Income Tax Cut Taken Back by AMT, 2010 AMT Taxpayersb Number (in millions) 2.6 35.6 17.9 NA As percent of all taxpayersc 2.7 33.0 16.1 NA As percent of all tax filers 1.9 24.2 12.1 36.3 As percent of filers, by AGI (thousands of 2001 $) 0-30 <0.05 0.2 0.2 <0.05 30-50 0.2 8.7 6.9 1.0 50-75 1.4 43.2 25.6 17.6 75-100 3.0 78.6 34.6 42.3 100-200 10.9 94.0 40.2 71.2 200-500 35.6 96.7 53.2 73.8 500-1,000 19.4 54.1 13.2 18.8 1,000+ 15.4 26.9 12.3 8.4 AMT Revenue Dollars (billions) 13.0 141.4 47.0 NA As percent of income tax revenue 1.4 9.9 3.0 NA Percent of AGI on AMT returns 8.9 55.5 26.4 NA Cost of income tax repeal (billions) 204.0 47.0 211.6
NA Source: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center Microsimulation
Model. NA = not applicable a. Current law includes the effect of the Job
Creation and Worker Assistance Act of 2002. b. AMT taxpayers include those with AMT liability on
Form 6251 and those with lost credits. c. Taxpayers are defined as returns with positive
income tax liability net of refundable credits. Efficiency Questions In theory, a good tax system combines a broad base
with low marginal tax rates. The AMT, however, often results in the opposite: a smaller tax
base and higher marginal tax rates than the regular tax. As noted, tax rules broaden the AMT tax
base by including preference items excluded from the regular tax base, but they shrink the AMT
tax base by providing an AMT exemption. For example, while the couple in our example
(see box) has $43,150 of taxable income under the regular tax, they have an AMT tax base of just
$26,000, because the AMT exemption ($49,000) is greater than the sum of preference items ($31,850).
And their marginal tax rate under the AMT— 26 percent—is much higher than their regular income
tax bracket of 15 percent. More and more taxpayers will find themselves in a
similar position over time. The share of AMT taxpayers with more income being taxed in the regular
tax than in the AMT is projected to rise from 66 percent in 2002 to 87 percent in 2010. The
share with higher marginal tax rates under the AMT than under the regular tax will rise from 35
percent in 2002 to more than 90 percent in 2010. Even if flawed as a stand-alone tax, the AMT could
serve as a useful backstop to the regular tax. For example, the AMT's taxation of private activity
bond interest income, which is exempt from the regular income tax, reduces the subsidy afforded
such investments and could improve efficiency. This outcome, however, depends on two
assumptions: that the subsidies in the regular tax are bad policy, and that the AMT efficiently
offsets the flawed subsidies. Although these assumptions might apply in particular cases, few
analysts would argue they apply in any general sense. Complexity The National Taxpayer Advocate and the Internal
Revenue Service have called the AMT one of the most difficult tax law areas to comply with and
administer. Complexity might be justifiable if it allowed policymakers to produce a fairer, more
efficient tax system, but the AMT produces questionable policy gains at best. Because AMT rules on the timing of income recognition
and deductions differ from regular income tax rules, taxpayers must keep two separate
books. Moreover, any revenue gains from the recalculations are largely offset by a second set
of complicated rules. These rules allow taxpayers to claim future income tax credits equal to
the benefits lost through the first set of rules. Thus, on net, the rules compound the tax's complexity
while contributing little to tax revenue. The complicated rules do, however, serve an important
policy goal: They reduce the number of highincome filers paying no income tax in a given year. But a
simpler solution would be to scale back such preferences in the regular tax rather than
requiring taxpayers to juggle two separate, complicated calculations. Other sources of AMT complexity often serve no real
policy goal. Most people who must fill out the AMT forms end up owing no additional tax.
Increasingly, the tax will impose greater compliance burdens on middle-class taxpayers, a group
that was never the tax's main target. And the complexity also makes predicting marginal tax
rates more difficult. Taxpayers cannot make informed economic choices if they do not know the
rate at which additional income will be taxed. Options for Reform The underlying goals of the AMT—requiring high-income
people to pay some tax, deterring the aggressive use of tax shelters, and ensuring
progressivity—are all sound, but the tax itself is replete with problems. We consider four AMT reform
options that could help preserve the AMT's goals but would stem its explosive growth, reduce its
complexity and distortions, and better shield the middle class. For comparison, we show the effect
of repealing the AMT altogether. We also discuss issues surrounding the financing of AMT
reform and consider modifications to the regular income tax and the estate tax that could complement
AMT repeal. Four Ways to Reform the AMT Option 1: Index the AMT to inflation. Indexing the AMT to inflation after 2002 would
reduce the number of AMT taxpayers in 2010 by 71 percent. The
number of AMT taxpayers with AGI of $50,000 to $75,000 would fall by more than 90 percent
(table 2). However, under current law, this option would cost $370 billion in revenues through
2012 and $440 billion in total budget costs (including added interest payments).4 Option 2: In addition to inflation indexing, allow
dependent exemptions and personal nonrefundable credits. This option would reduce the number of AMT
taxpayers in 2010 by 83 percent. In addition, it would virtually eliminate
the tax among individuals with incomes of $50,000 to $75,000. Option 3: In addition to inflation indexing and the
other measures in option 2, repeal the AMT exemption phaseout and allow deductions for state and
local taxes as well as for miscellaneous expenses. Like option 2, these reforms would ease AMT
requirements without creating aggressive sheltering opportunities. This plan
virtually ends the AMT, reducing the number of AMT taxpayers by more than 99 percent. The additional
measures, however, primarily benefit higher-income taxpayers. Relative to option 2, option
3 provides much larger tax cuts to households with incomes over $200,000. It is also
much more expensive. Comparison option: Repeal the AMT. Repealing the AMT after 2002 would add $788 billion
to the public debt over the next decade. If EGTRRA were
extended through 2012, the cost of repeal would rise to $950 billion. Despite the growing share
of middle-class taxpayers that will pay at least some AMT, repeal would be very regressive, with
the largest tax cuts going to the highestincome households. Under repeal, approximately 1,300 filers
with incomes over $1.1 million (2001 dollars) and more than 17,000 with incomes
above $200,000 would owe no federal income tax in 2010. These figures are several times greater
than the figures projected under current law and under the other options outlined here. The main
difference between reform option 3 and repeal is the effect of the deferral preferences.
These provisions play an important role in ensuring that high-income tax filers pay at least
some tax. TABLE 2. Reform Options 10-Year Cost ($ billions) Percentage Reduction in AMT Taxpayers, by AGI (2001 dollars) With No Other Tax Changes With a Partial EGTRRA Freeze at 2002 Levelsa Number of AMT Taxpayers 2010 (millions) All 50K- 75K 500K- 1million Revenue Budget Revenue Budget Index of the AMT after 2002 10.4 70.9 92.3 2.8 368
438 38 31 Option 2b 6.0 83.1 98.3 7.8 423 507 76 79 Option 3c 0.3 99.1 99.7 90.3 597 725 194 228 Repeal 0.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 647 788 239 285 Option 4d 16.8 52.8 90.5 -80.9 -20 -36 NA NA Source: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center Microsimulation
Model and authors' calculations. NA = not applicable a. Freeze EGTRRA income tax rate cuts and estate tax
changes at 2002 levels. The top four statutory income tax rates would be 27.0, 30.0, 35.0, and 38.6
percent.The top estate tax rate would be 50.0 percent, the 5 percent surtax would be repealed, the
unified credit would be $1 million, and state tax credit rates would be reduced by 25 percent. Other features
of EGTRRA would be phased in as scheduled. b. Option 2 indexes and allows dependent exemptions
and personal nonrefundable credits. c. Option 3 takes steps in Option 2 plus allows
deductions for expenses and taxes and repeals the AMT exemption phaseout. d. Option 4 indexes the AMT exemption for inflation,
raises the top AMT rate to 35 percent, repeals the phaseout of the AMT exemption, and lowers the AMT
rate bracket thresholds (to $65,000 for married couples filing jointly, $48,750 for singles and heads
of household, and $32,500 for married individuals filing separately), all effective after 2004. It also
indexes the AMT rate bracket thresholds after 2010 and allows personal nonrefundable credits regardless of AMT
liability after 2003. Paying for AMT Reform As our calculations show, AMT reform is generally
expensive as well as regressive. One way to offset the revenue and distributional impact of AMT
reform would be to freeze last year's tax cut at 2002 levels. Eliminating the reductions in income
and estate tax rates scheduled to take effect between 2003 and 2010, as well as abandoning the
repeal of the estate tax in 2010, would raise revenue and remove the most regressive features of
the tax cut.5 But even the combination of freezing the cuts in
upper-income tax rates at their 2002 levels and holding the estate tax to its 2002 level could not
fully finance the AMT reform options described here. Each option would still require billions of
dollars: about $31 billion for option 1; $79 billion for option 2; $228 billion for option 3; and $285 billion
for outright repeal. Alternatively, we examine a revenueneutral reform of the AMT alone. Option 4: Retarget the AMT to upper-income households
without sacrificing tax revenues. This option would index the AMT exemption to inflation
starting in 2005, allow taxpayers to use all personal credits against the AMT, eliminate the
phaseout of the AMT exemption, raise the top AMT tax rate to 35 percent, reduce the threshold at
which the higher tax rate takes effect to $65,000 from $175,000 for married couples, and index
the threshold for inflation starting after 2010. By 2010, these adjustments would reduce the number of
AMT taxpayers by more than 50 percent relative to current law and redirect the tax toward
high-income households. The number of AMT taxpayers with incomes between $50,000 and $75,000
would fall 90 percent, but the share with incomes between $500,000 and $1 million would rise 81
percent. The share with incomes over $1 million would rise 260 percent (not shown in
table). Repealing the AMT and Reforming the Regular Income
Tax To offset the expense and effects of repeal,
reformers could incorporate AMT provisions that are deemed good tax policy into the regular income tax.
For example, if deferral preferences were seen as necessary to deter tax shelters, they could
be incorporated into the regular income tax. If reformers conclude that deductions for state and
local taxes are unwarranted, they could eliminate these itemized deductions for all
taxpayers, not just for those paying the AMT. Such a reform package could make the regular income tax
simpler (by reducing the number of allowable deductions). Still, unless Congress raised tax rates
across the board, this reform package could not completely pay for the elimination of the
AMT. Conclusions The AMT will soon affect 1 in 3 American taxpayers.
Lack of inflation indexing creates automatic annual AMT tax increases. Meanwhile, the phase-in of
the 2001 tax cuts will gradually reduce regular income tax burdens. Squeezed on both sides,
more and more taxpayers face a problematic tax most of them were never meant to
pay. AMT reform is a question of when and how—not if. One
reform approach would be to eliminate the AMT's exemption preferences while keeping its
deferral preferences. This strategy would remove the AMT for almost all taxpayers and would
hold down the possibility of high-income tax filers paying no tax, but it would also be both
expensive and regressive. Outright repeal, an alternative approach, would be even more expensive
and regressive. Moreover, without other changes, repeal would allow many high-income tax
filers to avoid paying any income tax. Alternatively, policymakers could retarget the AMT to
the highest income groups and use the revenue generated to eliminate the tax for most
middle-income taxpayers. Absent political constraints, the best approach would
couple AMT repeal, or a significant rollback, with changing the regular income tax and the estate
tax in ways that preserve the goals of the AMT without imposing the costs. This kind of reform
could improve equity and efficiency, simplify taxes without inviting more shelters, and help
maintain revenues and progressivity. To date, however, neither political party has been
willing to shoulder responsibility for addressing the problem. But fixing the AMT should hold appeal
across the ideological spectrum. Those who believe higherincome taxpayers should pay a lower
share of the tax burden than they currently do will find that AMT growth undermines Congress's
ability to enact high-income tax cuts. Those who favor progressive taxation will see that the
AMT's future growth will fuel taxpayers' dissatisfaction with the current system—perhaps
enough to spur passage of the flat tax or other radical tax reforms. Under a flat tax, individuals
would pay no direct tax on their capital income. Then, millions of wealthy citizens—not just 155—would
pay no individual taxes. Notes 1. The AMT generally preserves the lower tax rates on
capital gains in the regular tax. Current law limits tax rates on long-term capital gains to 10 percent for low -
and moderate-income taxpayers and 20 percent for others. Those limits apply to both the regular income tax and the
AMT. 2. Under either the regular income tax or the AMT,
the Bradys are entitled to a child tax credit of $3,600 ($600 per child). The credit reduces their tax liability but
does not affect the difference in tax burdens under the AMT and the regular tax. 3. In the example, however, the Bradys will pay lower
taxes than before EGTRRA, because the increased child tax credit is available against the AMT as well as the
regular tax. Other tax credits, such as those for educational expenses, are only allowable against the AMT through
2003. 4. In table 2, the "effect on budget" is based on the assumption
that the option is financed by government borrowing. It thus includes the interest payments the
government would have to make on the additional debt. 5. See Burman, Maag, and Rohaly (2002). References Burman, Leonard E., Elaine Maag, and Jeff Rohaly.
2002. "EGTRRA: Which Provisions Spell the Most Relief?" Tax Policy Issues and
Options No. 3. Washington, D.C.: Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. Burman, Leonard E., William G. Gale, Jeffrey Rohaly,
and Benjamin H. Harris. 2002. "The Individual AMT: Problems and Potential
Solutions." Tax Policy Center Discussion Paper No. 5. Washington, D.C.: Urban-Brookings. About the Authors Leonard E. Burman is a senior fellow in the Income and Benefits Policy
Center at the Urban Institute and codirector of the Tax Policy
Center. William G. Gale is a senior fellow and Arjay and Frances Fearing
Miller Chair at the Brookings Institution and codirector of the Tax Policy
Center. Jeffrey Rohaly is a research associate in the Income and Benefits
Policy Center at the Urban Institute and director of tax modeling for the Tax
Policy Center. Benjamin H. Harris is a senior research assistant in the Economic
Studies program of the Brookings Institution. About the Series The Tax Policy Center (TPC) aims to clarify and
analyze the nation's tax policy choices by providing timely and accessible facts, analyses, and
commentary to policymakers, journalists, citizens, and researchers. TPC's nationally
recognized experts in tax, budget, and social policy carry out an integrated program of research and
communication on four overarching issues: fair, simple, and efficient taxation; long-term
implications of tax policy choices; social policy in the tax code; and state tax issues. A joint venture of the Urban Institute and the
Brookings Institution, the TPC receives support from a generous consortium of funders, including the Ford
Foundation, the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the George Gund Foundation, and the
Charles Stewart Mott Foundation. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
of the Urban Institute, the Brookings Institution, their boards of trustees, or their
funders. This brief is an abridged version of "The Individual AMT: Problems and Potential
Solutions" (Tax Policy Center Discussion Paper No. 5), which contains
citations and documentation of the results in this brief. Permission is granted for reproduction of this
document, with attribution to the Urban Institute. The authors thank Peter Orszag, Gene Steuerle, and
Jerry Tempalski for helpful discussions, Deborah Kobes for expert research assistance, and the
Ford, Casey, Mott, and Gund Foundations for research funding through grants made
to the Tax Policy Center. | |||||||||||||||
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