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Will the Estate Tax Ever Be Repealed?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
Just
two years ago, Congress was poised to eliminate the hated estate
tax permanently. Today, however, several U.S. Senators are using
their own wasteful spending habits to justify retaining the tax.
In the eyes of these Senators, budget deficits are never the result
of too much spending, but rather too little taxing. They cannot
imagine giving up even the tiny fraction of federal revenues raised
by the estate tax. Why is a one percent revenue cut unthinkable
to these lawmakers, while annual three or five percent spending
increases are considered business as usual? To answer this question,
look no further than the transportation bill passed last week in
the Senate. It is perhaps the most pork-filled, wasteful appropriations
bill passed in years. The bottom line is that spending money is
what keeps these Senators in office. They wont stop pork spending
because the American voting public rewards them for it.
The
estate tax, more accurately known as the death tax because it is
levied when a taxpayer dies, confiscates anywhere from 37% to 55%
of a individuals assets. While these rates are unconscionable,
the death tax also represents an especially galling form of double
taxation. Americans already pay federal and state income taxes throughout
their working lives. They pay income and capital gains taxes on
money they save and invest. They pay local property taxes on their
homes. They pay various sales taxes whenever they buy something.
They even pay steep federal taxes on gasoline and telephone use.
Yet after a lifetime of burdensome taxes, the death tax punishes
Americans one last time simply because they worked hard, saved,
and invested to pass something on to their families.
In
2001 the House debated an outright repeal of the estate tax. Political
considerations based on the false argument that the estate
tax only applies to some imagined class of dynastic families
prevented the passage of an immediate repeal. Instead, a slow ten-year
phaseout bill passed in both the House and Senate chambers. Incredibly,
however, the Senate added a provision that would cause the tax rules
to revert back to the current system after the ten-year period.
In other words, the death tax will return after 2011! So a taxpayer
dying in 2010 would pay no estate tax, while his unfortunate neighbor
dying the next year would get a whopping bill from the IRS. Accountants
and tax attorneys might support this crazy system, but it creates
an estate-planning nightmare for American families. Some doctors
even warn it could give elderly people a morbid incentive to time
their deaths out of concern for their loved ones.
The
tired argument that the estate tax only affects the rich simply
is false. Many of my constituents are farmers, ranchers, and small
business owners. They are hardly rich, but some of them have built
up valuable businesses they would like to pass on to their children.
Yet when they die, their children rarely have the liquid cash needed
to pay the death tax bill. Often the business must be sold or divided
to raise money for the IRS. Many family farms across this country
have been bought by large corporations because of the estate tax.
Ultimately,
the argument against the death tax is a moral one. People should
not be punished for working hard, saving, and building wealth. Our
society should respect the most basic property right, namely the
right to dispose of ones property as one chooses. The American
dream is based on making a better life for ones children,
despite the empty rhetoric of the class-warfare politicians in Washington.
Building wealth is not sinister, it is admirable. Our tax rules
should encourage the decidedly American virtue of saving for the
future.
October
25, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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