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Why Won't Congress Abolish the Estate Tax?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
The U.S. Senate
had a golden opportunity to repeal the federal estate tax last week,
but fell a few votes short. I fear that vote might represent the
high-water mark in the movement to get rid of this destructive tax
once and for all.
Fortunately,
estate taxes no longer devour 60% of some individuals wealth
when they die. Congress passed legislation in 2001 that reduced
estate tax rates and increased the amount of assets exempt from
the tax. Yet Congress has been unable to abolish the estate tax
altogether, and, due to a political compromise the old rates will
be back in effect come 2011 unless Congress acts first.
The estate
tax raises very little money. In fact, even at its height the estate
tax accounted for only a little more than 1% of federal revenues.
A congressional Joint Economic committee report estimates that Americans
spend as much avoiding estate taxes paying attorneys and accountants as
they do paying estate taxes. A study by a Stanford professor concluded
that True revenues associated with estate taxation may well
have been near zero, or even negative.
Its no
longer a matter of tax policy or economics the arguments in
favor of the estate tax have all been demolished. Instead, the estate
tax survives purely because of politics.
The real motivation
behind the estate tax is a deep-seated hostility to property rights,
and a misguided fear of family dynasties. But people dont
keep money in mattresses anymore. Money inherited from an estate
is either spent, saved, or invested all of which are better
for the economy than sending it to Washington, where bureaucratic
overhead consumes at least 50 cents of every dollar.
If you truly
own your property, you have the right to dispose of it any way you
wish. You can sell it, give it away, or direct who will receive
it when you die. This control is the essence of property rights.
If you cant control what happens to your property, you dont
really own it.
Thats
why the estate tax is so destructive. Since people dont want
the government controlling their property when they die, they twist
themselves into pretzels finding ways to avoid turning assets over
to the IRS. Some create elaborate trusts to minimize their taxes,
supporting the economically wasteful estate-planning industry. Others
simply lose their entrepreneurial spark, stop working, and spend
their money succumbing to a die broke attitude.
Again, the
issue is control. People who have worked hard to build wealth simply
cannot stand to see government take a big chunk of their assets
when they die, so they do anything they can even economically harmful
things to prevent it. This is what supporters of the estate
tax cannot seem to understand.
For smaller,
family-owned farms and ranches, the estate tax is especially threatening.
Such operations may be worth several million dollars when the value
of land, livestock, buildings, and equipment are considered. Yet
when the owner dies, his heirs often do not have liquid cash to
pay a hefty tax bill. As a result, all or part of the family business
may be sold to pay the IRS. This has accelerated the trend toward
corporate ownership of American farms and ranches.
As William
Beach at the Heritage Foundation summarizes, the estate tax does
four things all of which are bad for the economy and frankly un-American:
First,
it discourages savings and investment.
Second, it undermines job creation and wage growth.
Third, it stifles investment.
Fourth, it contradicts a central premise of American life, namely,
building wealth and getting ahead.
For all of
these reasons, its time to get rid of the estate tax once
and for all.
June
14, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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