
ATPI, in cooperation with the Tax Policy Center of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution as well as New York University School of Law, sponsored a one-day conference on Getting More from Tax Incentives on May 19, 2009. The day-long event brought together some of the nation's foremost experts on tax policy, health policy, housing, and retirement to discuss whether and how tax incentives should be used to promote social policy goals and how best to reform current tax incentives for health care, owner-occupied housing, and retirement savings. Panelists addressed five questions in each area including: Should the government intervene? If so, should we use fiscal incentives, explicit regulation, or soft paternalism? If we use fiscal incentives, should they be tax incentives or direct spending? What features would make tax incentives most effective? and What policy would you recommend?
The following is an outline of the program and speakers:
Introductory Remarks and Moderator
Eric Toder, institute fellow, Urban Institute and Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center; former deputy assistant secretary for tax analysis, U.S. Treasury Department
Presentations
"Introduction: Overall Budgetary and Distributional Effects of Tax Incentives"
Austin Nichols, senior research associate, Urban Institute and Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center
"Principles for Determining When and How Fiscal Incentives Should Be Provided"
Lily Batchelder, professor of law & public policy, NYU School of Law
Discussants
Bruce Bartlett, former deputy assistant secretary for economic policy, U.S. Treasury Department
Chuck Marr, director of federal tax policy, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; former senior advisor for budget policy, National Economic Council
Moderator
Howard Gleckman, senior research associate, Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center; editor, TaxVox; former Senior Washington Correspondent, Business Week
Panelists
Leonard Burman, director, Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center; institute fellow, Urban Institute; former deputy assistant secretary for tax analysis, U.S. Treasury Department
Fred Goldberg, partner, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; adjunct professor of law, NYU School of Law; former commissioner, Internal Revenue Service; former acting assistant secretary for tax policy and deputy assistant secretary for tax policy, U.S. Treasury Department
Len Nichols, director, health policy program, New America Foundation
Moderator
Dennis Zimmerman, director of projects, American Tax Policy Institute
Panelists
Reid Cramer, research director, asset building program, New America Foundation
Ingrid Ellen, associate professor of public policy & urban planning; codirector, NYU Wagner and Furman Center for Real Estate & Urban Policy
Todd Sinai, associate professor of real estate, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Moderator
Rosanne Altshuler, codirector, Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center; senior fellow, Urban Institute, professor of economics, Rutgers University; former senior economist, President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform
Panelists
Peter Brady, senior economist, Investment Company Institute