Good things
sometimes result after bad things happen. The growing revelations of wrongdoing
at the Internal Revenue Service dramatically illustrate the agency's devolution
into near anarchy, and this ought to lead to an operational revolution. It
ought to also lead to something else that needs to be done, and has needed to
be done for a long, long time: overhauling the current tax system.
An organization
known as CCH has tracked the growth of the tax code from 1913 when it was only
400 pages to 2012 when it was 73,608 pages.
An Associated
Press story noted, "At nearly 4 million words, the US tax law is so thick
and complicated that businesses and individuals spend more than 6 billion hours
a year complying with filing requirements, according to a report Wednesday by
an independent government watchdog. That’s the equivalent of 3 million people
working full-time, year-round."
“This report
confirms that the code is 10 times the size of the Bible with none of the good
news,” said Rep. Dave Camp (R-Mich.), chairman of the House and Ways and Means
Committee. “Our broken tax code has become a nightmare of loopholes and special
interest provisions that create added complexities and costs for hardworking
taxpayers and small businesses.”
“If tax compliance
were an industry, it would be one of the largest in the United States,”
according to Nina E. Olson, the National Taxpayer Advocate. She said that since
2001, Congress has made an average of more than one change a day to tax law,
nearly 5,000 in all.
The tax code is a
chaotic mess that no one can comprehend. So, replace it with something much
simpler that can be easily understood, and doesn't require 100,000 federal
bureaucrats, some of whom cannot control the urge to persecute the people they
work for.
Without going into
great detail, there are two sensible approaches that would vastly improve the
tax system. Both have advantages and disadvantages, but both the Flat Tax and
the Fair Tax are far superior to the 73,000 page monstrosity we now suffer
under. Even substantially lowering tax rates and reducing deductions and
loopholes in the current system would improve things.
It has never made
any sense to tax people's productivity, particularly when so many are excluded
from paying any tax at all. Those who have no skin in the game thus don't mind
raising taxes on the people that pay the freight for them.
Taxing what people
spend, on the other hand, puts everyone in the game to the extent that they buy
stuff subject to taxation, excluding food, medicine, medical care, and perhaps
a very few other things from the tax, while protecting charitable
contributions, and move ahead with replacing our asinine tax code with
something that makes sense, and is immune from malfeasant bureaucrats and
politicians. Then, when Congress wants to raise the consumption tax from, say,
10 percent to 12 percent instead of being frugal, nearly everyone will have a
reason to care.
The current system
enables politicians trying to make political hay to demonize corporations or
the wealthy by criticizing the way they pay or don't pay taxes. The most recent
example of this manufactured "moral outrage" concerns Apple, Inc.,
which earns money in the US as well as in foreign countries. Senator Carl Levin
(D-Mich.), has leapt to the front of the bandwagon to condemn Apple, which paid
nearly $6 billion to the federal treasury in 2012 on money earned in the US,
but keeps money earned overseas out of the US due to the high corporate tax
rate. But Apple does only what the tax code allows or encourages it to do.
America's
corporate tax rate, which at 35 percent is one of the highest in the world,
literally drives corporations to keep money overseas that otherwise could be
brought here to produce jobs, and be taxed here, if Congress wasn't so greedy.
Rather than make an honest effort to fix that problem, Sen. Levin foolishly
prefers to label Apple a "tax dodger."
Many Americans
agree with him. Those who think corporations are misbehaving by using
provisions of the tax code to pay less tax should do a little personal
reflection. Anyone who has ever taken a deduction for mortgage interest or
other adjustment to earned income is just as guilty of being a tax dodger as
Apple.
Managers and employees
who lack character and integrity have fatally soiled the IRS. It has violated
the most sacred tenet of American government: to honorably serve its citizens.
At the very least it must be overhauled and slashed in size and power, but
better yet, let's rid ourselves of the need for an agency like the IRS.
A final thought:
The Affordable Care Act is a 2,700-page bill hatched in the dark of night by
one political party, passed on a partisan vote by elected representatives who
had not read the bill, controls 14 percent of the private economy, opens
private medical data of every American to government scrutiny, and will be
controlled by 16,000 new IRS employees. What could possible go wrong?
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