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Who Opposes Simpler, Lower Taxes?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
The
presidents advisory panel on tax reform held a public meeting
last week to discuss possible changes to our tax code, which most
Americans view as a disgrace. Unfortunately, the reform panel consists
almost entirely of Washington beltway insiders who have absolutely
nothing in common with ordinary American taxpayers. The members
are former Congressmen and Senators, DC think tank scholars, university
professors, and unbelievably a former commissioner of the IRS!
Its hard to imagine someone more opposed to taxpayer interests
than the head of the IRS, the very agency that millions of Americans
want abolished.
Its
doubtful that former politicians and tax bureaucrats will propose
meaningful tax reform. After all, weve heard this song before.
Remember the big tax reform bills of 1986, 1997, and 2001? We were
promised a simpler tax code each time, but it never happened. Some
slight progress has been made in terms of very modest rate reductions
and a slow phaseout of the estate tax, but even those changes may
be reversed by revenue-hungry future congresses.
The
reform panel should have two simple goals: make taxes lower, and
make taxes simpler. Anything else quite frankly is insulting to
the American public. But during several hours of discussion last
week, the various panelists talked about everything but those two
objectives. Instead they embraced the practice of using the tax
code as a tool for social engineering, debating what exemptions,
credits, and deductions should be tinkered with to steer taxpayers
toward or away from certain activities.
The
panelists also misused the term tax subsidy over and
over. A true subsidy is very simple: certain individuals or businesses
receive taxpayer money from the government. But the panel members
clearly have accepted the thoroughly leftist idea that all income
belongs to the state, and therefore the state subsidizes
you by letting you keep some of the money you earned. This is nonsense.
If the government uses tax dollars to build you a house, you have
received a subsidy. Taxpayers have given you something. But if you
pay less in income taxes because of the mortgage interest deduction,
you have not been subsidized by anyone. The government
has not given you something; it simply has taken less. What kind
of tax reform proposals can we expect from people who cant
understand the fundamental difference between a subsidy and a tax
cut?
When
it comes to actual tax reform legislation in Congress, dont
underestimate the lobbying influence of accountants, tax attorneys,
tax preparers, IRS employees, and mortgage companies, just to name
a few. Many, many groups and industries benefit from our Byzantine
tax system in one way or another. They will not accept major changes
to the tax code without a fight.
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. 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.
October
18, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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