税收立法中的民主规避

IF 0.9 Q2 LAW EJournal of Tax Research Pub Date : 2021-09-10 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.3920749
Clint Wallace
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《减税与就业法案》(Tax Cuts and Jobs Act)是30多年来最重要的税法,但让它获得通过的策略包括了各种规避公众监督的策略。因此,许多纳税人直到一年多以后提交自己的纳税申报表时才知道自己将受到怎样的影响。本文认为,这种缺乏透明度是美国联邦税收立法中避免和限制民主投入和回应的持续病态的一部分。事实上,一些学者和政策制定者试图将税收立法从基于民主的决策转向规定的结果,并用明确批评民主决策的公共选择理论为这些举措辩护。我批评这种对税收立法的民主回避方法,并提出税法应该是提供更大透明度、问责制和响应机制的产物,以促进民主合法性。我建议对美国国会的税收立法进行四项改革,以使由此产生的税法更加民主合法。其中一项建议是要求国会准确考虑(并公布)一项拟议中的税法变化预计将如何影响不同的典型纳税人,包括来自每个国会选区的纳税人。这将使观察立法过程的实际纳税人能够预测他们在拟议法律下的待遇,进而要求他们的代表对他们的实际利益作出更大的反应。其他的建议建立在这种方法的基础上,要求立法者支持特定条款的原因透明化,以及对联邦税收立法过程中产生的分析类型进行彻底的改造,以供非专家使用,但我认为这是完全可以实现的。
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Democracy Avoidance in Tax Lawmaking
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was the most significant tax law in more than three decades, but the strategy for getting it enacted included a variety of maneuvers to avoid public scrutiny. As a result, many taxpayers did not know how they would be affected until they filed their own tax returns more than a year later. This Article identifies this lack of transparency as part of a persistent pathology of avoiding and constraining democratic inputs and responsiveness in U.S. federal tax lawmaking. Indeed, some scholars and policymakers have sought to channel tax lawmaking away from democratically grounded decisions and towards prescribed outcomes, justifying these moves with strands of public choice theory that are expressly critical of democratic decision making. I critique this democracy avoidance approach to tax lawmaking, and make the case that tax law should be a product of mechanisms that provide greater transparency, accountability and responsiveness to advance democratic legitimacy. I propose four reforms to tax lawmaking in the U.S. Congress to make resulting tax laws more democratically legitimate. One proposal is to require Congress to consider (and publicize) precisely how a proposed change in tax law is expected to affect different typical taxpayers, including taxpayers from each congressional district. This would allow actual taxpayers observing the lawmaking process to anticipate their treatment under a proposed law and in turn demand greater responsiveness to their real interests from their representatives. Other proposals build on this approach, calling for transparency as to the reasons why legislators support particular provisions and a radical—but, I argue, entirely achievable—reworking of the types of analysis produced in the federal tax legislative process for consumption by non-experts.
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