April 15th,
our national tax day, comes this year just as Congress prepares
to pass the 2007 federal budget. If you think paying taxes was
painful this year, Ive got some bad news: the new budget
is a grotesque illustration of everything wrong with the federal
government. At $2.7 trillion, its the largest budget in
U.S. history by a long shot. Like it or not, the pressure to raise
your taxes will be enormous in coming years no matter who controls
Congress. The amount of money government spends, borrows, and
prints simply cannot be sustained.
For most
people, their income tax return represents their most meaningful
interaction with the federal government. It requires them to confess
their actions over the past year to the IRS in excruciating detail.
It's an annual ritual guaranteed to elicit strong feelings of
disgust. Thanks to the deception of income tax withholding, however,
some people actually look forward to tax time and a much-anticipated
refund. Imagine how quickly Americans would demand lower taxes
and spending if they had to write the federal government a check
each month.
Most people
understandably want a simpler income tax system, but its
useless to discuss tax reform without spending reform. Who wants
a 40% flat tax? Who wants a national sales tax if it adds 50%
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 $2.7 trillion from us, the only question is
how it will be collected. The current answer is the labyrinthine
tax code, which pits taxpayers against each other in a political
scramble to make sure the other guy pays. The truth is
that Congress does not need $2.7 trillion, or anything
close to it, to fund the proper constitutional functions of the
federal government.
The only
tax reform needed is to lower or abolish existing taxes. When
reform proposals seem complicated, the reason is simple: they
obscure their true nature as schemes to shift the tax burden around.
Its not who pays or how we pay; its how much
we pay.
The real
enemy of tax reform is the spending culture in Washington. Let
me repeat: we will never have tax reform in this country until
Congress changes its spending habits. The reform rhetoric, regardless
of which party it comes from, never changes the reality that federal
spending grows every year. Congress spent $2.4 trillion in the
last Bush budget; the new budget proposes to spend $2.7 trillion.
The same unconstitutional agencies are funded, the same unwise
programs are perpetuated, but at higher levels than last year.
The previous budget serves merely as a baseline; the only question
in any given year is how much spending will increase. Once created,
no spending program is ever eliminated. The cycle goes on and
on, with different administrations and different people in Congress.
But
could America exist without an income tax? The idea seems radical,
yet in truth America did just fine without a federal income tax
for the first 126 years of her history. Prior to 1913, the government
operated with revenues raised through tariffs, excise taxes, and
property taxes, without ever touching a worker's paycheck. Even
today, individual income taxes account for only approximately
one-third of federal revenue. Eliminating one-third of the proposed
2007 budget would still leave federal spending at roughly $1.8
trillion a sum greater than the budget just 6 years ago in 2000!
Does anyone seriously believe we could not find ways to cut spending
back to 2000 levels? Perhaps the idea of an America without an
income tax is not so radical after all. Its something to
think about this week as we approach April 15th.