Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 99 Part 2.djvu/848

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PUBLIC LAW 99-000—MMMM. DD, 1985

99 STAT. 1958

CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS—AUG. 1, 1985

(3) the ability of the Federal Government to plan and conduct rational fiscal policy is frustrated by elaborate schemes to avoid taxation and the unintended effects of tax incentives and penalties; (4) progressive erosion of voluntary compliance threatens the fiscal integrity of our public finances and the confidence of our citizens in the Federal Government's capacity to govern; and (5) a number of plans, each designed to simplify and reform the Tax Code, have been before the Congress for a time sufficient to allow for extensive analysis and evaluation. (b) It is therefore the sense of the Congress that tax reform should be adopted as soon as possible, and that it should incorporate the following principles and objectives: (1) efficiency and responsiveness to market conditions in the economic activities of American businesses and consumers; (2) simplicity of structure and lower marginal tax rates; (3) a fair and equitable distribution of the tax burden among all taxpayers, with relief for those below the poverty level, and incentives to bring them into the work force; (4) a broader tax base, with deductions essential to avoid genuine hardship or to protect the economic security of the American people; and (5) increased incentives for work, saving, and investment. CBO SCOREKEEPING REQUIREMENTS

31 USC 1329.

SEC. 5. It is the sense of the Senate that because the Senate requires timely reporting of legislative action on spending bills, and because the Senate requires continual control over the budget, the Director of the Congressional Budget Office shall issue a weekly report during periods when the Senate is in session detailing and tabulating the progress of congressional action on bills and resolutions providing new budget authority and changing revenues and the public debt for a fiscal year, including, but not limited to the requirements set forth in Public Law 93-344, section 308(b). FARM LOSS DEDUCTION

SEC. 6. It is the sense of the Senate that revenues should be increased and it is assumed that tax legislation will be enacted to limit to the national median family income the amount of farm loss which may be deducted against nonfarm income, and it is further assumed that revenues derived from enactment of such legislation be used to reduce individual income tax rates and to assure that fulltime, family-size farm operators will not be disadvantaged by unfair competition from high-income taxpayers with substantial nonfarm income. ENHANCED TAX LAW ENFORCEMENT

SEC. 7. It is the sense of the Congress that revenues should be increased and it is assumed that the Committees on Finance and Ways and Means will develop legislation to reduce the tax enforcement gap, estimated by the Internal Revenue Service at $92,000,000,000 in fiscal year 1986. It is further assumed that such legislation should provide for increased and improved enforcement and collection, through audits, examinations, and other steps designed to identify and eliminate tax cheating and increase revenue collections from individuals and corporations currently evading Federal taxes, and that the legislation should include steps designed to