Tax expenditures are a significant part of America’s tax code, playing a major role in our economy. Sometimes referred to broadly as “loopholes,” tax expenditures are preferences built into the code that individuals and businesses can take advantage of. Tax expenditures come in a variety of forms including the following:
- Tax exclusions allow certain categories of income to go untaxed (e.g., active duty pay earned by military personnel in a combat zone is not subject to taxation).
- Tax exemptions shield certain assets, or the income taxpayers earn from certain assets, from taxation (e.g., individuals can exempt interest earned from some state or local bonds, and some charitable organizations are exempt from paying income and property taxes).
- Tax deductions allow taxpayers to deduct expenses from their taxable income (e.g., deduction on medical expenses in excess of 7.5 percent of individual income).
- Tax credits reduce the amount of taxes owed. Refundable credits provide cash back to the taxpayer when taxes owed are less than the credit due.
From an economic standpoint, tax expenditures are very similar to government spending. They are policy choices intended to encourage certain behaviors, and have significant influence over decisions made by individuals and businesses in our economy. For example, the mortgage interest deduction was intended to support homeownership, and the exclusion of employer-sponsored health insurance was meant to support companies covering their employees’ health care. In this way, expenditures are, in essence, spending through the tax code.
It is difficult to precisely track and evaluate the efficiency of tax expenditures, as many beneficiaries might have engaged in the desired behavior (e.g., buying a home) without the added tax incentive. But like spending, tax expenditures result in lost revenues and higher deficits for the government. In 2023, tax expenditures totaled $1.8 trillion — which is more than we spend on many major government programs.
In 2023, just five tax provisions accounted for $1 trillion – which is more than the government spent on Medicare or defense that year. These tax expenditures include:
- Exclusion of pension contributions and earnings ($369.0 billion)
- Exclusions of and reductions on dividends and long-term capital gains ($310.8 billion)
- Exclusion of employer contributions for medical insurance and care ($202.1 billion)
- Child Tax Credit ($122.2 billion))
- Earned Income Tax Credit ($71.2 billion)
Other Helpful Resources:
- What are tax expenditures and how are they structured? Tax Policy Center
- What Are Tax Expenditures — Tax Foundation
- Tax Expenditures — Congressional Budget Office
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Further Reading
How Do We Tax the Top 1% — And What That Means for the Federal Budget
The top 1 percent pay a significant share of all federal taxes, while also benefitting disproportionately from preferential tax treatment.
What is Stepped-Up Basis on Capital Gains and How Does it Affect the Federal Budget?
The step-up in basis is a provision in tax law that relates to how assets — such as stocks, bonds, or real estate — are valued and taxed after their owner passes away.
Some Tax Provisions Are Expiring in 2025 — Here’s What Experts Think About Them
The TCJA lowered taxes for millions of households and made filing simpler for many — all while making the country’s fiscal outlook worse.