The Ultimate Tax Cut
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
Since it is
presidential campaign season, we will inevitably be treated to the
usual discourse about tax cuts. Some candidates will call for tax
cuts, undoubtedly as a way to bribe voters into voting for them.
Others will resist the call, undoubtedly in fear that their favorite
government program might not receive desired funding. In actuality,
all the tax-cut talk will be rather meaningless, especially for
advocates of liberty.
From the founding
of the United States through the early part of the 20th century,
with a few exceptions (e.g., the Civil War), Americans lived without
income taxation, the federal government being funded primarily by
tariffs and excise taxes. Americans were free to keep everything
they earned and decide what to do with their money. There was no
IRS and no one had to file income-tax returns.
When the idea
of an income-tax-free society is posed to a modern-day American,
oftentimes the reaction to such a radical idea is shock. Why,
that would be anarchy! the American sometimes responds. But
that notion would have come as a surprise to our American ancestors,
who lived in a society with a fully functioning federal government
and no income taxation for more than 100 years.
Why did our
American ancestors oppose income taxation? Because they had discovered
an important point: People cannot be free in a society in which
the government has the power to levy taxes on income. To put it
another way, people are free only when they have the ability to
keep everything they earn and decide for themselves what to do with
their own money.
With the advent
of income taxation in America, the relationship between citizen
and government was inverted. Prior to the income tax, the citizen
was sovereign by virtue of the fact that he was free to earn unlimited
amounts of money and there was nothing the government could do about
it. Like it or not, it was his money, to do with as he pleased.
With the adoption
of income taxation, all that changed. In effect, the income tax
nationalized income. While many people would undoubtedly prefer
not to think about it in this way, under the federal income tax
everyones income belongs to the government or, if you prefer,
to society. The power to set the tax rate is essentially
the power to decide how much of their income people are going to
be permitted to keep.
Thus, the income
tax has converted the relationship between government and citizen
into one akin to parent and child. The portion of their income that
the citizenry are permitted to retain has effectively become an
allowance. Sometimes the government is good to the citizenry and
lets them keep more of their income. Sometimes the government is
not so nice and lets the citizenry keep less of their income. But
whats important here, in terms of freedom, is not the percentage
that is being levied but rather the fact that it is the government
making the determination. Thats obviously a far cry from a
society in which there is no income taxation at all.
Taxes and
spending
There is another
factor to consider here, a practical one. Those candidates who call
for tax cuts are doing more than throwing a bone to beleaguered
taxpayers. They are also perpetrating a fraud, because they know
that since government expenditures today far exceed government revenues,
people are going to have to pay for the deficit somehow.
Permit me to
digress a bit here. One of my biggest personal revelations when
I discovered libertarianism many years ago was that the federal
government acquired its resources differently than people in the
private sector. I had envisioned the government as just being part
of a huge collection of enterprises, producing its own wealth and
deciding what to do with it. That was one reason I could not understand
why anyone would object to the governments helping the poor
with welfare. I thought, Why shouldnt the government be as
free as everyone else to decide how to spend its money,
and why shouldnt it spend its money on helping the poor?
And then I
discovered that the federal government acquired its money differently
than everyone else. Its money comes from taxes, which are forcible
exactions imposed on people. That is obviously very different from
how people in the private sector get their money. Microsoft, for
example, depends on offering products that induce people to voluntarily
trade their money for a particular piece of software. If people
decide to hold on to their money instead of buying the software,
there is nothing that Microsoft can do about it. That is, Microsoft
cannot force anyone to hand over his money.
Its different
with the government. Its revenues do depend on force. If someone
doesnt like a particular service that the government is providing
(e.g., waging the drug war, providing people with welfare, torturing
detainees, or killing people in Iraq), he cant do what he
does with Microsoft. He must pay his income taxes anyway, on pain
of fine and imprisonment or even death upon steadfast refusal to
do so.
Now, back to
the tax-cut bone that presidential candidates love to offer voters
during campaign season. As Milton Friedman pointed out, the true
level of taxation is not what is being collected in taxes but rather
the level of government expenses. Why is this so? Because if the
government is spending more than it is receiving in tax revenues,
it is doing it in one of two ways borrowing or printing the
money.
If its
borrowing the money to finance its expenditures, those debts must
ultimately be paid back. Thats why a tax-cut bone that presidential
candidates offer voters is a fraud. They know that one way or another,
ultimately the government is going to have to repay those debts.
And the only way it can get the money to repay those debts is to
tax the citizenry.
Inflation
plunder
Another way
historically a popular one that the government finances
its excess expenditures is by simply printing the money to pay for
expenditures, a practice known as inflation. When the government
inflates the currency to pay its excess bills, the result is a lower-valued
currency. As with any other product, increasing the supply of money
lowers its value. And the lower value of a currency is reflected
in a rise in the prices of the things that money buys such
as groceries, automobiles, gasoline, clothing, and school supplies.
The advantage
of paying for government expenses through inflation, as compared
to income taxation, should be obvious: Most people dont have
any idea that this is the way that government is paying its bills.
They think that inflation is some sort of mysterious monetary infection
that just seems to strike nations randomly and unexpectedly. In
fact, even mainstream educated journalists often use
the term inflation to describe rising prices in society
rather than using it in its true sense an artificial increase
in the supply of money that is reflected in the rising prices in
society.
The point of
all this is to show another reason that the tax-cut bone that presidential
candidates offer the electorate is a fraud. Since people are going
to have to pay for the excess government expenditures through the
reduced purchasing power of their income, what practical difference
does a tax cut make to them? Moreover, even if a tax cut increases
government revenues, as some people claim, government expenditures
inevitably rise proportionately.
Suppose that
government spends $100 million a year and collects income taxes
of $100 million. The following year, the government decides to engage
in an overseas military adventure that doubles government expenditures
to $200 million. The president, however, vows not to raise taxes.
To pay the extra $100 million in new expenses, the government simply
prints the money, which because of rising prices reduces the purchasing
power of everyones income, a reduction, say, equal to a doubling
of the income tax.
Are people
any better off because the government has financed its expenditures
through inflation? Of course not. While its true that some
taxpayers might benefit more and others lose more, the fact is that
either way, the government has sucked $200 million out of the pockets
of the citizenry.
Lets
assume that during this process, a power-lusting presidential candidate
comes along and calls for a tax cut. Ill lower your
taxes if you elect me! exclaims the politician. Would people
be better off with such a tax cut? Of course not, because what is
gained with the tax cut will be lost in the reduced purchasing power
of their income, given that the excess expenditures are being financed
with inflation.
Ultimately,
the issue of income taxation cannot be divorced from the things
on which the federal government is spending its money. As we have
seen, the money that government is spending must be collected, either
directly through taxes, through borrowing (which must be repaid
through taxes or inflation), or inflation. The burden of government
expenditures must ultimately be borne by the citizenry.
Alternative
taxes
Thus, while
the abolition of the income tax and the IRS are necessary prerequisites
to a free society, if the financial burden of other taxes is equal
to the same amount that the income taxes were collecting, how much
better off are people financially if theyre having to pay
the same amount of money through an alternative tax that they were
previously paying though the income tax? Lets assume, for
example, that a family is earning $60,000 a year and paying $20,000
in income taxes. Suppose the income tax is abolished and replaced
with a national sales tax, which ultimately collects $20,000 from
our hypothetical family. While its true that the individual
will be freer in the sense that he no longer has to file income
tax returns and deal with the abusiveness and intrusiveness of the
IRS, the federal government is still determining the familys
allowance, albeit indirectly.
Thats
why, ultimately, the only protection that people have is a constitutional
prohibition on all taxation (the ideal) or, alternatively, a constitutional
limitation on the overall level of indirect taxation.
The former
would mean that government would have to depend on voluntary support
from the citizenry, just as churches, museums, and other charitable
organizations operate. Of course, the standard response to such
a suggestion is, Well, thats ridiculous. The American
people dont believe in government and, therefore, have to
be forced to support it.
Yet, if most
Americans didnt believe government is important, why wouldnt
they have abolished it a long time ago? The fact is that most Americans
do believe that government is important and essential and would
be as willing to support it as they do other organizations.
In an imperfect
world of indirect taxation to fund the federal government, people
would still be better off with a constitutional ceiling on the rate
of tax collected; for example: The federal government shall
collect its revenues only through tariffs, which shall never exceed
2 percent.
Obviously,
there would have to be a simultaneous moral and intellectual revolution
with respect to government programs because government revenues
will most likely be quite small, especially in comparison to what
they are today. That means that in order to restore a free society,
Americans must ask themselves a fundamentally important question:
What should be the role of government in a free society? Should
its role include taking money from one group of people by force
(i.e., taxation) in order to give it to another group of people
(i.e., provide welfare)? Should its role include the maintenance
of an enormous military-industrial empire that serves as an international
policeman and welfare-provider for the world?
The reason
that such questions are so important is that if people maintain
their allegiance to either a welfare state or a warfare state, they
need to recognize that the restoration of a free society becomes
impossible because of the massive amount of tax revenues needed
to fund such states. In fact, as one hopes that modern-day Americans
have learned, once they delegate to the government the role of providing
socialist or imperialist programs, its expenditures inevitably soar
exponentially.
Finally, there
is a critically important economic angle to all this. The key to
higher standards of living lies in the accumulation of private savings,
which tends toward investment in tools and equipment, which makes
workers more productive, and that tends toward higher incomes. Thus,
the more income and savings that government is confiscating, the
lower the standard of living of the citizenry.
Thus, a moral
and intellectual revolution against income taxation must be accompanied
by a moral and intellectual revolution against socialism and empire.
By limiting the role of government to its traditionally legitimate
functions of police, defense, and courts, the amount of voluntary
money needed to fund such operations becomes relatively minuscule.
The citizenry would have the freedom to keep everything they earn
in the marketplace, accumulate unlimited amounts of wealth, and
decide for themselves how to dispose of it. Herein lies the key
to a free, prosperous, and harmonious society.
April
8, 2008
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2008 Future of Freedom Foundation
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Hornberger Archives
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