Monday, April 13, 2009

Everyone Should Pay Income Taxes

It's bad for our democracy to exempt half the country.

By ARI FLEISCHER

If you thought Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme was bad, wait until you hear about the inverted pyramid scheme the federal government is working on. While Mr. Madoff preyed on people who trusted him with their money, the federal government has everyone's money, and the implications of its actions are worse.


David Gothard
Picture an upside-down pyramid with its narrow tip at the bottom and its base on top. The only way the pyramid can stand is by spinning fast enough or by having a wide enough tip so it won't fall down. The federal version of this spinning top is the tax code; the government collects its money almost entirely from the people at the narrow tip and then gives it to the people at the wider side. So long as the pyramid spins, the system can work. If it slows down enough, it falls.

It's also what's called redistribution of income, and it is getting out of hand.

A very small number of taxpayers -- the 10% of the country that makes more than $92,400 a year -- pay 72.4% of the nation's income taxes. They're the tip of the triangle that's supporting virtually everyone and everything. Their burden keeps getting heavier.

As a result of the 2001 tax cuts enacted by a bipartisan Congress and signed by President George W. Bush, the share of taxes paid by the top 10% increased to 72.8% in 2005 from 67.8% in 2001, according to the latest data from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).

Contrary to the myth that Mr. Bush cut taxes only for the wealthy, the 2001 tax cut reduced taxes for every income-tax payer in the country. He reduced the bottom tax rate to 10% from 15% and increased the refundable child tax credit to $1,000 from $500 per child, both cuts that President Barack Obama says we should keep. In so doing, millions of lower income taxpayers were removed from the tax rolls, shifting the remaining burden to those at the top, even after their taxes were cut.

According to the CBO, those who made less than $44,300 in 2001 -- 60% of the country -- paid a paltry 3.3% of all income taxes. By 2005, almost all of them were excused from paying any income tax. They paid less than 1% of the income tax burden. Their share shrank even when taking into account the payroll tax. In 2001, the bottom 60% paid 16.3% of all taxes; by 2005 their share was down to 14.3%. All the while, this large group of voters made 25.8% of the nation's income.

When you make almost 26% of the income and you pay only 0.6% of the income tax, that's a good deal, courtesy of those who do pay income taxes. For the bottom 40%, the redistribution deal is even better. In 2001, these 43 million Americans, who earn less than $30,500, made 13.5% of the nation's income but paid no income tax. Instead, they received checks from their taxpaying neighbors worth $16.3 billion. By 2005, those checks totaled $33.3 billion.

Today, Mr. Obama and many congressional Democrats want the "wealthy" to pay even more so there is more money for them to redistribute. The president says he wants the wealthy to pay their "fair share." Who can argue with that? But he never defines what that means. Is it fair for 10% to pay 70% of the income tax? Does he believe they should pay 75%, or 95%, or does fairness mean they should pay it all? It's clever politics to speak like that, but it is risky policy.

Mr. Obama is adding to this trend with his "Make Work Pay" tax cut that means almost 50% of the country will no longer pay any income taxes, up from a little over 40% today. A certain amount of income redistribution in a capitalistic society is healthy, but this goes too far. The economic and moral problem is that when 50% of the country gets benefits without paying for them and an increasingly smaller number of taxpayers foot the bill, the spinning triangle will no longer be able to support itself. Eventually, it will spin so slowly that it falls down, especially when the economy is contracting and the number of wealthy taxpayers is in sharp decline.

In addition to exempting almost 50% of the country from income taxes, today nearly every other social cause is given a loophole -- or a preference -- in the tax code. Want to buy a hybrid vehicle? You get a tax break. Do you own a solar water heater? You get a credit. Want to give to charity? You get a deduction. Own a house? There's another tax deduction for you. How about college savings, certain medical costs, and retirement savings? Yes, yes, and of course yes. Did you move, pay alimony, or "provide housing to a Midwestern displaced individual"? More deductions, credits and exemptions there too, if you qualify.

Everyone now has a sacred cow in the tax code. For my money, the most sacred thing of all is our country and its growth, but the sacred cows have turned into a pack of wolves. On both the spending and the tax side, the wolves are devouring our children's future.

Senate Budget Chairman Kent Conrad (D., N.D.) wants to cut hundreds of billions of dollars from the president's budget, but that's small potatoes given the size of the deficit. The debt problem is so big and hopeless, Congress's normal nips and tucks won't work. Something more fundamental needs to happen.

It's time to create an Economic Growth Code whose purpose is to fix and grow the economy, not redistribute massive amounts of wealth. A new tax code that creates growth and reforms our entitlement system is the only way to dig our way out of the hole we're in.

Under an Economic Growth Code, everyone in American would pay income taxes -- everyone. Such a system would be designed to foster broad-based growth for all, in contrast to the loophole-ridden system we have today. Not only is the current code flawed from top to bottom, it is used by politicians to divide the public along class lines and fails to promote prosperity.

Growth is the key to keeping the pyramid spinning, and to keep spinning the pyramid's tip needs to be broadened. Otherwise a country that was raised to believe that national bankruptcy happened elsewhere may have to think again. Given the state of the economy and trillion-dollar deficits projected as far as the eye can see, we need to return to an era of more conservative, fiscal discipline.

Congress should start by refusing to go along with Mr. Obama's promise to cut taxes for 95% of the country. With the government running an almost $2 trillion deficit, no one should have their taxes cut -- no one. Given the size of the deficit, fiscal responsibility demands nothing less.

Republicans in Congress need to develop their own version of an Economic Growth Code, an alternative tax code that directly targets the current mess and helps us to grow our way out of it. Republicans should not doodle in the margins -- they should use their minority status to launch the next big movement in policy and politics. Nothing creates revenue like growth and that's where Republicans should make their mark.

I favor the abolition of all Social Security, Medicare and estate taxes. In their place, we should create a simple income tax system that has no deductions or credits at all. The result would be a progressive, multitiered income tax in which everyone pays. The bottom 50% won't be excused from paying the cost of government and top earners will no longer have the loopholes they're used to. The middle-class, whose wages have stagnated, will benefit from economic growth. Social Security and Medicare will be funded from income taxes, ending the myth that these programs are supported through government trust funds and payroll taxes. The tax base will broaden dramatically, allowing rates to fall and helping to foster what's most important -- economic growth.

I'd also create a mechanism so tax rates go up or down for everyone -- no more dividing the country by lowering taxes for some or raising them only for others. A revenue system whose purpose is to pay the government's bills should apply fairly to one and all. If Congress wants to raise or cut taxes, it should do so for everyone.

Another benefit is that such a system will create an environment in which spending programs receive the scrutiny they deserve. It's funny what happens when everyone pays the bills; Americans may want less spending so they can pay fewer bills.

Mr. Fleischer, a former press secretary for President George W. Bush, is president of Ari Fleischer Communications.

6 comments:

Lauren Linzmeier said...

In order to fund social programs, the government must tax to gain necessary revenue. The job of the government is to devise a tax system that will have the smallest adverse affect on the economy. Traditionally, the US has favored a progressive tax system for this reason. The article argues that the US government has made our tax system too progressive, placing too much of the tax burden on the wealthiest citizens. Although Bush did reduce tax rates for nearly all Americans, not just the top income bracket, the wealthiest Americans benefited most because a small percentage change in their tax rate resulted in a large decrease in the overall dollar amount of taxes paid. I disagree with the author of this article; it is fair for a small number of taxpayers to contribute a disproportional amount if this group includes the CEOs making billions of dollars a year, wealthy stockholders, or any other American making an astronomical figure when the majority of Americans can't afford food, housing, and education. In terms of economic policy, taxes need to be cut in times of recession, despite the scary $2 trillion deficit the author fears. Economic growth, the premise on which his ideal tax system depends, is no guarantee.

victor said...

It would help i think in a way that is more equal to all and not having it more one sided. It would cause programs to work better and give the public the understanding of programs for issues as social security and medicare.

jorie d. said...

By making everyone pay the same amount and everyone getting either a tax cut or a tax increase wont solve the problems. If the wealthiest get a tax increase as does everyone else, then they would be able to afford, but that does not mean all others would be to, so in the end they would owe the government money. I believe that the only way to make the economy grow is to base taxes, increases and decreases, on the income of the person paying those taxes. Not everyone can afford the same lifestyle nor can they afford to pay the same bills and taxes.

Alex Ochoa said...

It is essential that everyone must do their fair share for helping out our economy right now. The nation is in no place to be exempting people from paying their income tax and also isn't fair to leave the burden of this on the wealthy. I like the analogy of the spinning top as that is the best way to look at this situation. I do agree that the few select people that are extremely wealthy should contribute more, but I don' agree with the fact that the wealthy should be the main provider. The government needs to slow down on the tax breaks so that they can get the economy revved up again.

Marissa said...

I agree that placing all the tax paying burden on the wealthiest Americans will only hurt us in the long run. To me it makes more sense that everyone pay an equal percentage of their income. That way, nobody is giving away a larger amount of their money than anyone else is.

erod said...

Everone should go face to face a millionar and shake the hands of them. The top 10% are paying 72.4% of the taxes. should they be paying less and save the rest of the money during this recession? or Give to fundraisers and helpless companies? Either way they should make everyone one pay some sort of amount of taxes.
"Want to buy a hybrid vehicle? You get a tax break. Do you own a solar water heater? You get a credit. Want to give to charity? You get a deduction. Own a house?" It was said during the article, but it shouldn't get rid of all the taxes,but there should be a limit on the few amount you pay. The upside-down pyramid depends on the wealthiest citizens to keep spinning, but them thinking its unfair the rich might find loopholes and the notorious deficit we already hold( 2 trillion) will increase. People feel apathetic right now because the wealthy are doing the work. It's everones country and everyone needs to contribute at least a bit.