Greg Ip has a good piece in the WSJ on the subject of the dynamic scoring of budget proposals. The opposition to this idea tends to come from the idea that it will all get very political. And I have ...
On Tuesday, the Congressional Budget Office said that it will use a different type of economic analysis to study federal spending policies' effects, particularly in regard to health care, Modern ...
The House has instructed the Joint Committee on Taxation and the Congressional Budget Office to factor in the macroeconomic effects of tax law changes when calculating the official budget score of ...
Factoring in the consequences of future economic growth due to tax reform enacted in major legislation — the essence of dynamic scoring as envisioned by the House — makes sense in theory. So, too, ...
David Stockman, President Reagan’s budget director, introduced the concept of dynamic scoring for tax cuts in 1981. Stockman believed that as the tax rates on income fell, the economy would expand.
In his testimony before the Joint Economic Committee, Senior Fellow and Director of Economic Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) Kevin Hassett examines the potential benefits of ...
While most citizens were distracted by the holidays, the enlarged Republican majority in Congress was laying golden pavers for its magical kingdom — a fabulous place where taxes are cut, military ...
WASHINGTON -- The dustup over "dynamic scoring" is a small indicator of the routine irrelevancy of Washington's budget debate. Instead of facing the real issues -- how much we should spend, on what, ...
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