We
All Pay For High Taxes
by
Ryan McMaken
Most
of the debate over Bush’s proposed 1.6 trillion dollar tax cut has
revolved around the question of who would benefit the most from
a reduction in taxes. As was expected, the Democrats have made a
big deal of how rich people would benefit the most from a Bush tax
cut. The Republicans have correctly countered by pointing out that
since rich people pay most of the taxes, it is only natural that
they should benefit from tax cuts.
Indeed,
it important to keep track of where the tax revenues are coming
from, but who pays the taxes are just one side of the equation.
Much neglected by the talking heads, is the question of where tax
revenues go after they are paid into the treasury. In the eighteenth
century, knowing where tax dollars were going was just as important
as knowing where they were coming from. If a project paid for by
a tax was illegal, then the tax itself could not be legal either.
It was important that government justify both the source and the
destination of tax dollars. In the modern era of one and two trillion-dollar
budgets, it is impossible to trace tax dollars from tax source to
tax supported project. We do know, however a lot about where the
revenues are being spent in general.
We
know that tax dollars support the military operations that bomb
innocent civilians in far away lands. Those same tax dollars support
federal tax investigators who harass Americans at home and around
the globe. They support federal officers who raid the homes of Americans
and spy on them by satellite and by email. And, they support the
federal prosecutors who meddle in the affairs of every business
from Microsoft down to the local dry-cleaners. The army of federal
tax-men, lawyers, regulators, and bombers is vast. They are supported
by the tax dollars paid by every American, but mostly by the tax
dollars of the wealthy. In the end, who pays the price of the tax
funds that come from the rich? The wealthy can afford to comply
with government regulations and to pay lawyers to defend them from
justice department lawsuits and IRS investigations. Middle class
Americans and small entrepreneurs, however, simply don’t have the
capital to absorb costly regulations and to escape the litigious
wrath of abusive bureaucrats. By defending a "soak the rich"
policy, average Americans will simply create an ever more powerful
and watchful government that few average people have the resources
to combat. When government grows in wealth, it grows in power, and
opposition to power is meaningless without stemming the life-blood
of those government programs and the government agents they support.
This is precisely why all Americans who value their own autonomy
should support tax cuts regardless of who directly benefits from
a smaller tax bill. When the arbitrary power of a distant and arrogant
government is brought to heel, all Americans will benefit. As long
as there is a sprawling national government to subsidize the ventures
of corporate interests on the government dole, the rich will stay
rich regardless of their tax bill. All the while, ordinary Americans
and true entrepreneurs will groan under the weight of an ever-growing
government.
If
one wishes to lessen the regulatory burden on Americans, one must
look not only at the regulations themselves, but the source of bureaucratic
funding: tax revenue. Cutting programs sounds great during a campaign,
but the reality is that it rarely happens. It’s just too much political
trouble. Bureaucratic agencies dig in their heels, and go all-out
defending their programs. Little ends up happening. Government programs
don’t need to be eliminated to cease functioning, though. They only
need to be de-funded. When the IRS endured budget cuts in the mid-nineties,
they had to scale back operations and eliminate the random audit
program. Every time a departmental budget is cut, local sovereignty
and freedom increases. Every time a regulatory agency can’t afford
to hire new personnel, another small business is spared a costly
hassle. It’s a simple equation.
So
sure, high taxes may take a lot of money from the wealthy, but those
high taxes are used to increase the power of big government over
all of us, rich and poor alike. When federal marshals raided the
Indianapolis Baptist Temple in an unprecedented seizure last month,
they were financed by tax dollars paid largely by wealthy taxpayers.
The parishioners weren’t wealthy, but they certainly paid indirectly
for allowing such massive wealth to fall into the hands of the federal
government in the first place.
March
14, 2001
Ryan
McMaken lives in Denver, Colorado. He edits the Western
Mercury.
Copyright
2001 LewRockwell.com
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