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Taxpayers
in Revolt
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
A
punk economy is doing what legislators around the country could
never do: shrink state and local governments. California Governator
Arnold Schwarzenegger has declared a fiscal emergency because his
state is $40 billion in the red and may actually be completely busted
by February. He even "ordered state officials to prepare to
furlough and lay off employees to cut costs," according to
Reuters, which would make the Golden State’s 8.4 percent unemployment
rate still worse.
The city of
Vallejo, California has already filed for bankruptcy protection
and two small towns northeast of San Francisco, Iselton and Rio
Vista, are "consulting with bankruptcy lawyers," reports
the Wall Street Journal. State Treasurer Bill Lockyer went as far
as to say, "California’s fiscal house is burning down."
In Nevada,
where the unemployment rate has hit a 25-year high of 8 percent,
that state’s budget must be slashed from $6.8 billion over two years
to between $5.4 and $5.8 billion. Compounding the problem is that
the Silver State’s Public Employment Retirement System has lost
$4 billion on its investments since July. NPERS has always claimed
it is actuarially sound but that assumes a constant 8 percent return
on its investments. No doubt the 19 percent loss the system has
incurred the last few months will destroy these assumptions.
Despite the
loss, NPERS executive officer Dana Bilyeu told the Las Vegas
Review Journal "state and federal laws prevent any reductions
in benefits – including increasing the retirement age – to existing
participants in PERS." That means taxpayers will have to make
up the difference, so that as Review Journal reporter Ed
Vogel explains: "Public employees now can retire after 30 years
and receive benefits equivalent to 75 percent of their average earnings
during their three best pay years. Police and firefighters receive
these benefits after 25 years on the job. Some retire at age 46."
Of course that’s
the difference between state budgets and the federal government’s.
States cannot create fiat money out of thin air to pay bills. The
federal government has a central bank at its disposal to create
money and subversively tax people by making their money worth less.
Increasing
the tax burden during a recession is a direct declaration of war
against taxpayers when they are most vulnerable. With unemployment
high, retail sales low and property values plummeting, surely elected
officials aren’t stupid enough to pile on more taxes?
Or are they?
New York governor David Paterson is trying to bridge a $15.4 billion
budget gap in his state. He has the bright idea to tax "sugary
soda, cable and satellite television, haircuts, massages, movie
tickets and downloaded music, among other things," Newsday
reports.
History shows
that people get angry when you kick them while they are down. During
the last great depression there were tax strikes. Property owners
created over 1,000 different taxpayer leagues around the country,
"which voiced outrage over what were perceived as needless
government expenditures in a time of severe economic hardship,"
economist David T. Beito writes in his book Taxpayers
in Revolt: Tax Resistance During the Great Depression.
Many taxpayers
just couldn’t pay at the depth of the depression and others wouldn’t
pay for ideological reasons, believing that government should suffer
along with taxpayers. The tax revolt movement attracted 30,000 members
in Chicago alone and the Windy City’s government was faced with
financial collapse as property owners stopped paying.
The movement
had such momentum that the federal government resorted to a national
"pay your taxes campaign." Chicago teachers were even
enlisted to chant "Pay Your Taxes!" at rallies around
the city. Municipal and government workers, along with academics
tried to sell the virtues of a more active state on the radio in
a nationwide series called "You and Your Government" that
ran from 1932 to 1936.
"The
taxpayers’ revolt of the 1930s should not be dismissed as a fluke,
aberration, or simple response to the stimulus of the depression,"
explains Beito. "Tax revolts in American society, including
that of the 1930’s, have often reflected, and continue to reflect,
persistent suspicions of expansive government, entrenched bureaucracy,
and domination of political institutions by experts."
State legislators
and local government officials may want to tread lightly. Beito
points out that the tax rebellions in the 1930s appealed to the
masses and average voters. It would be no different today. Taxpayers,
struggling to make ends meet, would likely join the revolt, if taxes
are raised just so 46 year-old ex-policemen and ex-firefighters
can enjoy cushy retirements.
December
22, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies. See his tribute to
Murray Rothbard.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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