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by Peter Fortune
May/June 1992
Why does Congress allow municipal interest payments
to be exempted from federal income taxes in the face
of a very large chronic deficit in the federal budget,
even though no constitutional provision requires that
this tax policy continue? The rhetoric of tax exemption
is philosophical, appealing to notions of appropriate
intergovernmental relations and, in particular, to the
doctrine of reciprocal immunity: no level of government
should use its taxing authority to impose harm on another
level.
But the true force behind tax exemption is that it
provides states and local governments with a valuable
subsidy, which can be enjoyed at their discretion. This
article identifies the problems posed by tax exemption,
and assesses some alternatives. It asks whether the
results of tax exemption represent an appropriate outcome,
and questions whether tax exemption is really necessary
to achieve the benefits stated in its favor.
Full-text article 
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