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Tax Reform Is a Shell Game
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Tax
reform is back in the news, brought to the political forefront by
a recent meeting of the presidents advisory panel on tax reform.
Once again, politicians and former politicians are lamenting the
complexity of our tax laws, as though their own spending measures
have nothing to do with it. But weve heard this song before.
In fact, weve been promised a simpler, fairer, and better
income tax system many times, most recently in 1997 and 1986 when
Congress made relatively significant changes to the tax code. Yet
the federal tax system remains an embarrassment, both in terms of
the tax burden itself and the outrageous compliance costs engendered
by its complexity.
One
tax reform idea tacitly endorsed by Federal Reserve chairman Alan
Greenspan calls for a national retail consumption tax to replace
the existing income tax. Absent the outright repeal of the 16th
Amendment, however, we cannot be sure that an income tax would not
reappear at some point. One can easily imagine popular support for
retaining the income tax on the very rich, which of
course is how the 16th amendment originally was sold to a gullible
public in the 1910s.
The
president has thrown cold water on the consumption tax proposal,
however, by announcing he opposes any reform that eliminates mortgage
and charitable deductions. This leaves us with variations on the
flat tax concept, which was savaged by the political left when advocated
by the likes of House Majority Leader Dick Armey and Steve Forbes
in the 1990s.
Lew
Rockwell of the Ludwig von Mises
Institute offers a very simple test for any tax reform proposal:
Does it reduce or eliminate an existing tax? If not, then it amounts
to nothing more than a political shell game that pits taxpayers
against each other in a lobbying scramble to make sure the other
guy pays. True tax reform is as simple as cutting or eliminating
taxes. No studies, panels, committees, or hearings are needed. When
reform proposals seem complicated, they almost certainly dont
cut taxes.
The
reform debate is strictly about politics and not serious economics.
Both sides use demagoguery but dont propose truly significant
tax reductions. Both sides use the outrageous expression cost
to government when talking about the impact of tax legislation
on revenues. This implies that government owns everything, and that
any tax rate less than 100% costs government some of its rightful
bounty.
Government
spending is the problem! When the federal government takes $2.5
trillion dollars out of the legitimate private economy in a single
year, whether through taxes or borrowing, spending clearly is out
of control. Deficit spending creates a de facto tax hike, because
deficits can be repaid only by future tax increases. By this measure
Congress and the president have raised taxes dramatically over the
past few years, despite the tax-cutting rhetoric. The real issue
is total spending by government, not tax reform.
Who
wants a 40% flat tax? Who wants a national sales tax if it adds
35% to the retail price of everything we buy? In other words, why
change the tax structure if spending stays the same? Once we accept
that Congress needs $2.5 trillion from us and more each year
the only question left is from whom it will be collected. Until
the federal government is held to its proper constitutionally limited
functions, tax reform will remain a mirage.
March
8, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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