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The Great and Mighty Tax Law: How the Roberts Court Has Reduced Constitutional Scrutiny of Taxes and Tax Expenditures

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Author(s)
Sugin, Linda
Keywords
tax expenditures
Obamacare
Affordable Care Act
tax power
unconstitutional conditions
state action
tax credits
Constitutional Law
Law
Tax Law

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/995846
Online Access
http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/faculty_scholarship/509
http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1508&context=faculty_scholarship
Abstract
This article compares National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius – the Supreme Court’s decision upholding the individual mandate in Obamacare as a tax, with Arizona Christian Schools v. Winn – the Supreme Court’s decision denying standing to taxpayers with an Establishment Clause challenge to a state tax credit. It argues that these cases aggravate a growing tension between the economic and legal analyses of taxation by reducing the legal significance of economic analysis in constitutional cases. It suggests that Arizona Christian Schools was a truly radical decision because it conceptualized tax expenditures as private action immune from constitutional attack, rather than state action subject to constitutional limitations, making tax expenditures legally invisible. The article parses the Court’s economic and legal approach, and contends that the Court misunderstood the important issues. It explains how tax cuts are distinguishable from spending through the tax law, and why tax expenditures – in the aggregate – should be legally important. It argues that the Court’s approach to tax expenditures not only reduces the fundamental protection that the Constitution guarantees individuals, but also has other troubling legal and policy implications. These decisions weaken the revenue-raising role of taxation, blur the conceptual structure of the tax law, and undermine the tax reform efforts of other branches of government. They jeopardize established legal doctrine by destabilizing the precedents on unconstitutional conditions attached to tax benefits, which depend on conceiving tax benefits as government subsidies or privileges. These decisions encourage legislatures to adopt provisions that favor high-income taxpayers, while discouraging transparent and equitable government. They make the tax law uniquely powerful.
Date
2013-01-01
Type
text
Identifier
oai:ir.lawnet.fordham.edu:faculty_scholarship-1508
http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/faculty_scholarship/509
http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1508&context=faculty_scholarship
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