Economic Policy Institute
EPI home
EPI home
Search
Navigation tips
Bookstore
Publications archive
Newsroom
Calendar
About EPI
Economists
Contact EPI
Web features
Job postings
Sign up
Support EPI
WEB FEATURES
Datazone
Economic Indicators
Issue Guides
Online calculators
Snapshots
Viewpoints
Audio/video archive

Email this pageEmail this page

Printer-friendly versionPrint this page   Email this pageEmail this page



Newsroom

Return to EPI Newsroom | Browse news by TOPIC | Browse archived news by DATE | Search archived news releases by KEYWORD

NewsFlash: November 7, 2007

23 million to pay higher Alternative Minimum Tax unless...

The Alternative Minimum Tax was enacted in 1969 ago amid public outcry over reports about super-rich individuals who owed no taxes. The AMT was devised to guarantee that everyone pays something. But in recent years, it has threatened to increase the taxes of middle-income taxpayers because it was not indexed to inflation and because the Bush tax changes since 2001 also failed to adjust the AMT. In 2006, the AMT increased taxes for about 4.2 million taxpayers; in 2007, that number will increase more than five-fold unless Congress takes action.

In today’s Snapshot, John Irons, EPI’s research and policy director, examines the numbers and the fixes under consideration.


For interviews or more information, contact the EPI Communications Department at 202-775-8810 or news@epi.org.

Click here for how to describe EPI.