Wednesday, April 10, 2024
Hickman Presents OIRA Review Of Treasury Regulations Today At UC-Irvine
Kristin Hickman (Minnesota; Google Scholar) presents OIRA Review Of Treasury Regulations Project at UC-Irvine today as part of its Tax Policy Colloquium hosted by Natascha Fastabend:
In a major retreat for presidential administration and a reassertion of tax exceptionalism, the Biden Administration pulled the plug—at least for now—on Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) review of tax regulations. The interagency memorandum of agreement (the 2023 MOA) ended the OIRA-facilitated interagency review process and compliance with Executive Order (EO) 12,866 for tax regulatory actions. Contrary to some assertions, the 2023 MOA goes further than any of its predecessor agreements by exempting not merely some or most but rather all tax regulatory actions from OIRA review. The move also ended a short-lived effort, memorialized in a 2018 memorandum (the 2018 MOA), that required OIRA review more often in the tax context than had been the case in the past.
Several justifications have been offered in support of the 2023 MOA and the retreat from OIRA review and EO 12,866 in the tax context. These justifications inhabit two dimensions
The first is empirical, which co-author Bridget C.E. Dooling and I are pursuing in a study described in a pre-analysis research plan and from which I will present preliminary findings. The second is normative, reflecting disagreements about priorities and values such as specialized expertise and efficiency versus accountability and transparency. Some of the normative justifications merely echo more universal objections to OIRA review, while others are more particularly grounded in perceptions of tax exceptionalism. In an essay, Competing Narratives in OIRA Review of Tax Regulations, Bridget and I engage these normative considerations by interrogating the primary justifications offered for the 2023 MOA’s wholesale rejection of OIRA review for tax regulatory actions. The implications of both the empirical and the normative analysis stretch beyond tax administration to questions of OIRA review of all agencies as well as the independent regulators.
https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2024/04/hickmanpresents-oira-review-of-treasury-regulations-today-at-uc-irvine.html