I love data. Especially when they are all over the place. This is the case with estimates of the impact of the charitable tax reforms, proposed in President Obama's (Congress-will-hold-it-hostage-forever-so-it-doesn't-really-matter) Jobs for America Act.
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that $230 billion in government revenue will be "lost" to charitable donations between 2010 and 2014. So the $230 billion question on the table to several economists is what would be the effect on charitable giving if the law:
The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that $230 billion in government revenue will be "lost" to charitable donations between 2010 and 2014. So the $230 billion question on the table to several economists is what would be the effect on charitable giving if the law:
- Reduced the charitable tax deduction for wealthy households +
- Increased the marginal income tax rates they pay?
- Decrease between $0.8 Billion and $2.43 Billion (1) OR
- Decrease by between $1.7 billion and $3.2 Billion(2) OR
- Decrease by between $2.9-billion and $5.6-billion.(3)
So, what might REALLY disrupt things as we know them?
- The Super Committee (AKA the United States Congress Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction) fails to reach a deal and across-the-board cuts in domestic spending go into effect in 2012. The Committee has a deadline of November 23, 2011.
- The collapse of the Euro and its ripple effects.
- Mother Nature hits the US with the world's first trillion dollar natural disaster (this would mean - most likely - one of the major coastal cities) causing massive long-term evacuations (among other horrors).
- A pandemic with which the public health system can't cope.
- Changes in tax exemptions, deductibility of gifts to churches/synagogues/mosques (my guess - I'd love to see economic models on this).
- Campaign finance and charities become so intertwined in 2012 Presidential Election that small donors throw up their hands in disgust and stop giving and voting.
- All current signers of the Giving Pledge decide to forego endowments and make their gifts for operating expenses. Starting in 2012.
- Corporate codes across the U.S. change to provide businesses with documented social returns the same tax treatment as nonprofits.
- High end donors shift their charitable budgets to political giving - deciding it's cheaper to "influence" policy then underwrite direct services.
- Small donors replace cash donations with volunteering, overwhelming local organizations with talent but slashing their contribution budgets.
(1) IUPUI Campbell Co study.
(2) Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center Microsimulation Model - presented to Senate Finance Committee, Testimony of Eugene Steuerle
(3) Joseph Cordes, an economics professor at George Washington University
2 comments:
- damaging: A a serious cyber attack on the US (take pick of critical targets)
- Damaging - another terrorist attack.
Positive: data will actually begin to be useful and used for integrated decisions-making system towards greater equity and sustainability as a truly valued part of production.
Damaging: - broke state budgets
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