National Journal.com

nationaljournal.com > Expert Blogs > Economy

NationalJournal.com Home Economy Experts Home Economy Home

National Journal's Economy

Contributor

Robert McIntyre, Director, Citizens for Tax Justice

Biography provided by participant

Robert S. McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice. CTJ is a nonpartisan research and advocacy group that fights for tax fairness-at the federal, state and local levels. Widely respected on Capitol Hill as "the average taxpayer's voice in Washington," CTJ was ranked at the top of the Washington Monthly's list of America's "best public interest groups."

Since he began his career in tax reform in 1976, Bob has written hundreds of articles on tax policy issues, in publications like the Washington Post, the New York Times, the New Republic, and academic journals. He also frequently appears on television and radio programs, and is a contributing editor at The American Prospect, where he wrote a column, "The Taxonomist," from 2000 through 2006. Bob often advises government officials on tax policy, both informally and in written testimony.

Profiles of Bob have appeared in The Wall Street Journal (May 2, 1985), Student Lawyer (Dec. 1985), National Journal (May 3, 1986), The National Law Journal (July 7, 1986), Smart Money (1995), The New York Times (May 21, 2001) (which called his analytical work "indispensable"), The Attleboro Sun (Sept. 27, 2004) and The Hill (Oct. 5, 2004).

CTJ's analyses of tax proposals are cited regularly in the media and by legislators and candidates in both parties. For example, in the mid-1980s, Bob's detailed reports on corporate tax avoidance are credited with providing the spark for the bipartisan, loophole-closing Tax Reform Act of 1986. The Washington Post said that the studies represented a "key turning point" that "had the effect of touching a spark to kindling" (June 29, 1986) and "helped to raise public ire against corporate tax evaders" (July 18, 1986). The Wall Street Journal (July 18, 1986) said that the studies "helped propel the tax-overhaul effort." CTJ's most recent corporate tax study, Corporate Income Taxes in the Bush Years, was published in September 2004.

Tax Notes (Mar. 21, 2001) pointed out that "with government estimators muffled by their political overlords" during the debates over the 2001 Bush tax cuts, CTJ "has filled the void and freely supplied the press as well as members of Congress with distributional analyses" that are "unbiased" and "of extremely high quality."

CTJ is also active in state and local tax debates around the country, and publishes a definitive analysis of state and local taxes called Who Pays? A Distributional Analysis of the Tax Systems in All 50 States, in 1996 and 2004 (2nd edition), with a new edition expected in 2008.

A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School (1975) and Providence College (1970) with an LL.M. from Georgetown University Law Center (1976), Bob is a member of the Massachusetts and D.C. Bars.

Recent Responses

Robert McIntyre has no recent responses.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Stay Connected

Archives

Contributors

Add Economy Experts To Your Site

Sister Blogs

Experts: Health Care

The Affordability Factor

Latest response: Karen DavisNovember 03, 2009 12:18 pm
The Ninth Justice

Editor's Note

August 11, 2009 4:00 pm