Economic Policy
The U.S. Chamber's Economic and Tax Policy Division focuses its work on advancing policies that create jobs and foster economic growth.
![](https://uschamber.imgix.net/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.uschamber.com%2Fassets%2Fimages%2FEconomic-Policy-GettyImages-1287863908.jpg?auto=compress%2Cformat&fit=clip&fm=jpg&q=10&w=100&s=df040b69fa77ebebfaa661dc694581f4)
Our division is committed to pro-growth tax policies that preserve America's global competitiveness and is opposed to tax increases that reduce businesses' ability to grow, invest, and create jobs. We believe a successful economy depends on a tax code that rewards achievement, encourages investment, and promotes growth. Below you will find links to our policy objectives and accomplishments, recent Hill communications, and other relevant materials.
Leadership
Latest Content
In this article, Foster explains that getting expensing right is a key part of improving neutrality regarding business investment.
Comprehensive tax reform, current edition, resembles the successful 1986 effort in many ways.
Tax reform’s chances are better in this Congress than at any time in the past 30 years.
The U.S. labor market is turning the page to the last chapter of recovery from the recession ending over eight years prior.
Reviewing and respecting the lessons from the last major tax reform over thirty years ago illuminates the road ahead.
American labor markets are finally turning the page on the Great Global Recession.
[This is part of an ongoing series entitled “Modernizing NAFTA,” which examines the importance of modernizing the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and it's critical impact on jobs, economic prosperity, and trade.
Sen. Durbin and Rep. DeLauro are seeking to single out and punish a small number of companies.
"And by the time they got done, they created a new world order, and every nation on Earth … has actually benefitted."
No rest for the weary. Congress has finished, for now, with health care reform, bloodied and battered. Next stop is tax reform.