By Peter Hannaford on 10.14.05 @ 12:07AM
The President's panel on federal tax reform is wrong. Steve Forbes is right.
WASHINGTON -- Pity poor former Senators Connie Mack and John
Breaux. In January, at the behest of President Bush, they set out
with seven other good citizens on a thankless mission that will
ultimately prove to be fruitless. The nine make up the President's
Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform. They are trying to make sense
of the senseless -- that is, the federal tax code, a pack rat's
nest of confusing rules, credits, deductions, exemptions, and
impenetrable language.
The tax code, all nine million words of it, is annually
encrusted with new complications arising from Congress's endless
effort to achieve this or that social goal, usually under the
rubric of "fairness." The Mack-Breaux panel is following in this
tradition. The other day it sent up some trial balloons. Worried
that mortgage interest deductions without a ceiling were prompting
affluent taxpayers to build bigger and bigger homes, they said they
might recommend "capping" the amount one can deduct. They also
talked of capping the amount-per-employee an employer can deduct
for health care premiums.
With a little over two weeks to go before it is to submit its
final recommendations, the panel sent up some other trial balloons.
Its members like the idea of expanding deductions for charitable
donations and getting rid of the odious and misnamed Alternative
Minimum Tax (actually it is the Alternative Maximum Tax) which
traps more middle-class earners each year. Mindful, however, that
its recommendations should be "revenue-neutral," the panel also is
tinkering with the idea of recommending a Value Added Tax. These
are popular with some European governments because consumers are
inured to them and they are relatively easy to increase. The VAT
would be a brand new source of revenue for the U.S. Treasury.
Although the panel's charge was to find ways to "simplify" the
federal tax code, it cannot be done. It is too large, complex, and
confusing. The panel's report will no doubt consist of a collection
of on-the-one-hand-this-on-the-other-hand-that recommendations that
will do nothing to make the tax code either simpler or fairer. To
the extent Congress takes up any of them for debate, the only
winners will be lobbyists for the interests most likely to be
affected.
WHAT SHOULD HAPPEN INSTEAD is that we should toss the federal tax
code into the dustbin, along with the Internal Revenue Service.
There is only one way to do that: Adopt a flat tax. As publisher
Steve Forbes points out in a new book, Flat Tax Revolution, you'd be able to do
your annual filing on a postcard, instead of wrestling with forms,
endless dense instructions, or paying a professional to do it for
you.
The proposal is clear and direct. A family of four making from
$46,165 (after taking a standard $13,200 exemption for each adult)
would pay a flat 17 percent on income. Present deductions would be
gone, but so would double taxation of dividends, taxation of Social
Security benefits, and the Alternative Minimum Tax.
Tax compliance would go up (it has in every country that has
adopted the system), and its annual cost of $200 billion would be
gone with the wind.
The Mack-Breaux panel may not have been paying attention, but
the world is going flat. The move got its greatest impetus from
former Iron Curtain countries. Russia adopted it nearly three years
ago. The Wall Street Journal reports that Russia "...now
gets more revenues from the rich from its 13% flat tax than from
its pre-existing Swiss cheese tax code with massive evasion and
50%-plus tax rates."
Estonia, Georgia, Hong Kong, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Serbia,
Slovakia, and Ukraine are all on the flat-tax bandwagon and
reporting similar results. Greece is the first EU-NATO country to
consider it and is expected to adopt it early next year. Even in
Britain, France, and Germany, politicians and policy makers are
discussing and debating it.
Critics on the left trot out hoary class-warfare arguments
against the flat tax. It won't help the poor. Yet, the flat tax
will drop off the rolls a larger group of low-income citizens than
ever before. It will only benefit the "rich," they say. Yet, as the
U.S. has proved each time it has made significant cuts in high
marginal tax rates, more money comes out of shelters and into
investments, resulting in more, not less, money for the Treasury.
The economic forecasters Steve Forbes used when he wrote Flat
Tax Revolution demonstrated that a flat tax would produce $6
trillion of new assets within 10 years and $892 billion in new
payroll taxes.
Inexplicably, there was not a word about the flat tax in the
"reform" panel's announcement the other day.
"The road to Hell is paved with good intentions," my late mother
used to say. If the federal tax code represents Hell on earth, the
President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform is headed straight
for it.
topics:
Taxes, Health Care, Books, Russia, NATO