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November
8, 2007
Tax Reform
Promises Treats, Delivers Tricks
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Representative
Charles Rangel's recently announced plan to address
the impending Alternative Minimum Tax's application
to middle-class Americans demonstrates limited
economic understanding.
The Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) began in the
late 1960's because 155 wealthy taxpayers had
become savvy enough with loopholes that they
managed to avoid income taxes altogether. Very few
Americans avoided taxes completely this way;
nonetheless, policy was enacted that now threatens
25 million Americans.
Rangel's plan boasts loudly about repealing the
AMT, but under the Democrats' pay-as-you-go rules,
actual tax cuts are not allowed. Congress must
replace any tax revenue reduction with an increase
somewhere else, and of course, there are no rules
preventing tax hikes. Thus, a new 4% surtax on
incomes over $150,000 for singles and $200,000 for
couples is proposed to "pay for" the estimated lost
revenue. This simultaneously raises $36 billion
MORE than simply leaving the AMT alone, and creates
a huge new marriage penalty tax. It won't be long
before $150,000 is an average income, and middle
class taxpayers will again face the situation we
see coming today from inflation and the AMT.
Overall, the Rangel tax plan is estimated to
increase taxes by $3.5 trillion over the next 10
years.
With the leadership in Congress calling for this
massive tax hike, spending levels promising to
absorb all that and then some (thanks to our
ambitiously misguided foreign policy), as well as
the Federal Reserve's again cheapening the dollar,
American taxpayers are wondering where their
purchasing power went. We are working harder than
ever before, as our standard of living falls.
The founding fathers never saw taxation as a
method to direct social behavior or enforce
equality. Equality to them was equality under the
law, not equality of outcome, or income. It was not
the founding fathers' job to manage the economy, or
make American businesses competitive. That was up
to the free market and American businesses. The
founders sought to provide only protection of
property and civil liberties such that job creation
could happen naturally and peacefully in a stable,
prosperous environment. They never sought to take
from the rich to give to the poor, or rob Peter to
pay Paul. But today, the top 5% of earners in this
country pay over half of all income taxes
collected, though they only bring in a third of the
income. One third of Americans pay nothing or
receive subsidies from government.
Tax policy should not be based on the premise
that government owns you and allows you to keep
some arbitrary amount of your labor. Thus, the AMT
should be repealed. The estate tax should be
repealed. Capital gains taxes should be repealed.
The income tax should be repealed. We don't need to
overhaul or adjust tax policy, we need to scrap the
whole thing and start over.
But this message is not getting through to the
leadership of Congress. Congress has ensnared
itself in rules so that the only changes in tax
policy allowed are increases, while the
administration is obsessed with spending,
especially spending us into oblivion by spreading
this dead-end war when we should be coming
home.
If Washington can only do wrong, then let's hope
for gridlock, until a more sensible Congress is in
office. Sometimes a do-nothing Congress is a lot
better than the alternative.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
Because
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