94
Years of Serfdom
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
This April
15 is the 94th year that Americans have had to file an income tax.
For most Americans, the day is a non-event. The federal and state
governments have already collected the taxes due by withholding
from each paycheck over the course of the calendar year. Most Americans
never saw the money and have no real idea that they earned it.
Some Americans
have their incomes over-withheld as a form of forced savings. They
look forward to tax time as it means they will receive a refund
check from the government that they can use for a summer vacation,
a big screen TV, a new appliance, or a down payment on a new car.
Few Americans
realize that over the last 94 years they have been enserfed and
have no more rights to their own labor than medieval serfs or 19th-century
slaves.
The 16th Amendment
to the Constitution was ratified because the income tax was only
for the rich. Some states ratified the amendment because no one
in the state had an income high enough to be subject to the tax.
According to
the US Department of the Treasury’s history
of the income tax, less than one percent of the US population
was subject to the income tax. A progressive structure was applied
to this less than one percent of rich Americans, with rates ranging
from 1 percent to 7 percent on incomes over $500,000, a great sum
of money in those days.
In the first
year of the income tax, the world’s richest person, John D. Rockefeller,
paid $2 million in income tax, almost 3 percent of the total income
tax collected.
People were
happy. They had finally gotten the rich.
And themselves
as well. Exemptions were reduced and tax rates were raised in rapid
succession in 1916, 1917, and 1918. Within five years the tax rates
ranged from 6 percent to 77 percent, and people whose incomes were
initially exempt now paid tax at more than double the initial top
rate that had applied to John D. Rockefeller.
In "free"
America today, despite the Kennedy, Reagan, and Bush tax rate reductions,
ordinary Americans have no more claim to their own labor than a
medieval serf. Most are content, however, with handing over 30 percent
of their income as long as they can hope to tax the rich at 50 percent,
the tax rate on 19th-century slaves.
Some 19th-century
slaves, whose skills were worth more in towns than on plantations,
were leased by their owners to businesses in towns. The businesses
would remit half of the slave’s wages to the owner. Out of the remainder,
slaves could save enough to purchase their freedom.
Today, we cannot
purchase our freedom from the IRS. The only free Americans today
are those who can work off the books or who can live on public welfare.
People who
reject my analogy can test the analogy by refusing the government’s
claim on their labor. They will find that the IRS can be just as
ruthless as the worst feudal lord or slave owner.
For many Americans
freedom is not as important as "fairness," by which is
meant a more equal distribution of income. However, a number of
studies indicate that a progressive income tax doesn’t achieve the
kind of leveling that some desire. Moreover, rich and poor are not
static groups. Studies have discovered that there is a great deal
of movement between the income quintiles. Some people rise, some
people fall, and some rise again. The same people do not inhabit
the same quintile year after year.
Government
does not seem to be the answer. Indeed, some of the largest incomes
result from collusion with government, such as the Clinton/Bush
financial deregulation that produced the world’s first annual incomes
of $1 billion.
The desire
to tax the rich has caused a concentration of less accountable power
in the United States as national and global corporations took over
from local businesses. The estate tax, created in 1916, has forced
family businesses, media, and farms into large corporate conglomerates.
The corporate media, and the animal, chicken, and egg farming, with
its inhumane conditions, antibiotics, and waste concentrations that
pollute the environment, and large scale chemical fertilizer farming
that pollutes rivers and oceans are, in part, unintended consequences
of taxation aimed at the rich.
A
mainstay of class war is the propaganda that "the rich don’t
pay taxes." This myth lives on despite the annual
release of IRS data that proves the contrary. In 2006, the most
recent year for which data is available, Americans whose tax returns
placed them in the top 1 percent earned 22.1 percent of adjusted
gross income and paid 39.9 percent of all federal individual income
taxes.
The top 5 percent,
defined as rich by President Obama, paid 60.1 percent of all federal
individual income taxes. The top 10 percent paid 71 percent.
Those Americans
whose earnings placed them in the bottom half of the income distribution
paid less than 3 percent of the individual income tax collected.
The immunity
of many Americans to facts is impressive. Just as many Americans
continue to believe that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction
and hid them in Syria, Russia, or Iran, many Americans will continue
to believe that "the rich don’t pay taxes."
April
15, 2009
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has been released by Random
House.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate
Paul
Craig Roberts Archives
|