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Do Tax Cuts Cost the Government Money?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Whenever tax
cuts are discussed in Washington, the media and most politicians
use the phrase, cost to government. How much will
this tax cut cost the government? we are asked, as though
some crime is being contemplated when we consider reducing taxes.
The American people have every right to fund the federal government
at whatever level they deem acceptable, and if they choose through
their elected representatives to reduce that funding level, they
are not somehow injuring the government. If Congresses passes a
new law that results in you paying $1000 less in taxes next year,
have you taken something from the government that rightfully belongs
to it? Or has the government simply taken less from you?
You dont
cost the government money, the government costs you money!
Of course its
reasonable to demand that politicians cut spending when they cut
taxes. Thats the definition of real fiscal conservatism: government
should not take too much from the private economy in taxes, but
neither should it spend too much and run up deficits. Thats
why I vote against the wasteful appropriations bills that relentlessly
increase federal spending year after year.
I reject the
notion that tax cuts harm the economy. The economy suffers when
government takes money from your paycheck that you otherwise would
spend, save, or invest. Taxes never create prosperity. Private-sector
innovation and productivity are the engines that drive our economy,
regardless of what politicians tell us.
Tax reduction
is my first priority in Congress. The reality is that most working
Americans lose about half of their incomes to federal, state, and
local taxes. Tax Freedom Day, representing the portion
of the year you must work to pay for government at all levels, is
roughly June 1st for most Americans. Imagine all of your hard work
this year between January and the end of May going to the government!
One tax in
particular should be eliminated as soon as possible the tax on
Social Security benefits. Those benefits were never taxed between
the 1930s and 1984. Treating them as taxable income represents nothing
more than a trick to reduce Social Security benefits by stealth.
I supported legislation that successfully repealed a 1993 tax increase
on benefits, and my own bill, HR 180, would go further and eliminate
all taxes on Social Security. Our seniors paid taxes throughout
their working lives to fund the Social Security system, and it is
immoral to tax them again on their benefits.
Various
other taxes also must be reduced. Capital gains taxes are terribly
counterproductive, punishing those who save and invest. Payroll
taxes impose a tremendous compliance burden on businesses, especially
smaller entrepreneurs who cannot hire an accounting department.
Federal gas taxes should be slashed to provide taxpayers relief
at the pump. Most importantly, federal spending must be dramatically
reduced so that all Americans can go back to working for themselves
instead of working to pay their taxes.
October
24, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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