The Future of an Illusion: Kerry’s Tax Policy
by
Charles Adams
by Charles Adams
One
of Sigmund Freud’s most interesting books was entitled The
Future of an Illusion. Freud was talking about the illusion
the infant has about its parents, who seemed to be so all-powerful.
That unique title seems to fit John Kerry and the Democratic Party’s
call for increased taxes on those earning over $200,000, and thereby
raise new revenues for the government to spend in reality,
that is an illusion.
On
ABC’s "This Week" narrated by George Stephanopolous, John
Kerry and John Edwards were asked about their tax plans, and if
they would be able to raise the new revenue they wanted without
taxing the middle class. Kerry, in keeping with the Democratic Platform
in Boston, said they would tax the rich, those making more than
$200,000 a year, and thus it would not be necessary to increase
taxes on the middle classes. Bill Clinton had a similar tax plan
in his bid for the White House. This has been a longstanding Democratic
strategy for getting votes, but that is all it is good for. It won’t
raise revenue even though on its face it should, but in the real
world, it is just a political ploy. The rich have always had the
wherewithal to avoid excessive taxation they just rearrange
their affairs to avoid taxation, something the middle classes are
not able to do.
The
middle classes have always been the only dependable source for taxes.
If a government really wants revenue, that is where they have to
go. Tax historians have noted this for centuries.
Ronald
Reagan’s tax planning is just one simple example of how the rich
can easily avoid the upper tax brackets. Someone noticed what a
fine golf swing Reagan had, and the answer was that when he reached
the top tax bracket, he stopped working and played golf for the
rest of the year. Many wealthy doctors (and others) do the same
thing, closing down their medical practice around August and then
taking a vacation from earning money for the rest of the year. A
government cannot force a wealthy taxpayer to work if the taxpayer
finds the tax rates personally intolerable, especially if they are
targeted for attack.
Others,
with smart accountants, using many forms of sophisticated tax planning,
easily avoid the impact of high tax brackets. If Kerry is elected
and is able to get Congress to go along with this latest Democratic
plan to greatly increase taxes on earnings above $200,000, we can
expect a flood of deferred compensation plans covering earnings
above that figure, using what the Treasury recognizes and calls
the "Rabbi Trust," since it was first formulated for a
rabbi, and later became a Treasury approved tax deferral device
for everyone. However, the Rabbi Trust and Reagan’s golf habits
are, as any competent tax practitioner knows, just two of many routine
ways to avoid Kerry’s soak the rich tax strategy. The possibilities
are legion.
History
is full of amazing examples, like the first income tax in the United
States, in 1916, when the top bracket was 7%; a few years later
the top bracket was raised to 77%, or eleven times higher, yet the
77% rate did not produce eleven times as much revenue, in fact it
shocked the Treasury by producing almost the same revenue as the
7% rate did. At the 7% top bracket, about 1300 returns were filed;
with the 77% top bracket, only about 250 returns were filed. Where
did all the top bracket taxpayers go? The rich simply rearranged
their affairs to avoid the 77% tax rate.
"As
if by magic"
In
May of 1894, when Britain adopted the first progressive tax rates,
the London Times astutely observed:
Single out
the big and moderately big properties for attack, and very soon,
as if by magic, they will begin to evade you and disappear, as
all things in the world very reasonably do when they are singled
out for attack. Even the half starved crow will not wait to be
continuously shot at.
Thirty
years later, President Calvin Coolidge learned the truth of the
Times observation when the United States Internal Revenue
Bureau informed him that high progressive rates lead us to "the
point of getting nothing at all." It was this amazing phenomenon
that prompted the Secretary of the Treasury, Andrew Melon, to propose
a Constitutional Amendment to cap tax rates at 25%, considered to
be the rate that would produce the greatest amount of revenue for
the government. Once the rate exceeded 25%, tax planning would kick
in gear, and revenues would decline. Even the American Bar Association
supported this Amendment.
Again,
if Kerry’s sock the rich tax policy becomes law, we can predict
with certainty, that most of these taxpayers will disappear, "as
if by magic." And the middle class, just as certain, will have
to "pick up the tab," as the saying goes. That is not
an illusion that is reality.
Finally,
after World War I, when France’s war-time premier, George Clemenceau,
was leaving America following lectures at America’s leading universities,
he was asked if he had any complaints about Americans. He said,
"Yes, there were two: They make a lousy cup of coffee, and
they are appallingly ignorant of history." That is still true
when it comes to taxes. America is one of the only countries in
Western Civilization where there are no courses on tax history at
our universities. We are appallingly ignorant of tax history. If
ABC’s George Stephanopolous had known his tax history, he could
have nailed Kerry on his planned soak the rich tax strategy and
left the Democrats scampering for some way out of this political
folly.
September
21, 2004
Attorney
Charles Adams (send him
mail) is
the author of When
in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession,
and Those
Dirty Rotten Taxes: The Tax Revolts That Built America. Much
of this material and more on this subject can be found in his book,
For
Good and Evil: The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization.
Copyright
© 2004 by LewRockwell.com
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