DON’T FALL FOR TAX REFORM

Guest Post by Jeff Deist

Please don’t fall for tax reform.

It’s a con, and a shell game. It’s a promise every presidential candidate makes, including Trump. But we ought to be suspicious of grandiose talk about Congress reforming anything. Tax reform proposals always evade and obscure the real issue, which is the total cost– financial, compliance, and human– taxes impose on society. The fundamental questions about war and entitlements and state power go unasked. We never consider whether Congress really needs to spend more than $4 trillion in 2018, or how it managed to double federal spending in only 15 years.

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Since those questions are never seriously raised, every proposal necessarily pits various interest groups against each other in a deadly game to make sure the other guy pays. After all, that $4 trillion has to come from somewhere. Hence we read articles about “winners and losers” in the Wall Street Journal, hapless tax serfs in a zero-sum world.

Other articles, including this one from Esquire, demonstrate how unlikely any substantive tax changes really are. Any talk of eliminating the senseless estate tax, for example, gives rise to paroxysms of anger and talk of “plutocrats” (when did Esquire become a bizarre leftwing mouthpiece instead of a men’s style mag?):

The Senate’s tax plan emerged full-grown from the forehead of Mania on Tuesday. As is customary for some documents, it is vague in almost all its major details. But we do know that it eliminates the estate tax entirely — a plutocratic goodie that probably caused a postmortem emission from the grave of John D. Rockefeller that looked like the gusher from his first oil well — and it gives to the middle class with one hand while taking it away from the other, thereby robbing Peter to bribe Paul. Ultimately, the estimates are that it will cost the federal treasury $1.5 trillion over the next decade, and the people pushing it decline to say how they’re going to make that cut pay for itself, proving that the Republicans at least continue to adhere to the first half of the blog’s First Law of Economics, to wit: Fck The Deficit. The only details that are clear about the plan are the ones that benefit the country’s real owners.

Note the old “cost to government” argument, which never seems to go away. And a very heartfelt concern, I’m sure, about deficits. This is why I’m exceedingly skeptical Congress will pass overarching tax legislation. The last true “reform,” in the sense it significantly altered the tax code, passed in 1986. In today’s political climate there is little appetite for debating the tax treatment of labor vs. capital, earned income vs. unearned income, retail sales vs. flat topline income, renting vs. owning, etc. And we should not forget that taxes are a form of carrot and stick, a way for Congress to reward and punish various constituencies. It makes little sense for them to give up this power, just as it make little sense for lobbyists to lobby themselves out of a job.

Whole armies of such lobbyists, journalists, accountants, and tax lawyers inevitably go crazy analyzing every new tax reform proposal. They spend hundreds of hours writing about what it will mean, as though existential questions are at stake. But what emerges from Congress a year or so later, if in fact anything emerges at all, generally looks nothing like the earlier proposals. It is almost always milder and worse (from a libertarian perspective) than promised, especially when “tax cutting” Republicans are in office. But nobody runs for office promising to tinker with the tax code.

As an aside, presidents should have nothing to do with tax policy. The White House staff should have nothing to do with it. The Treasury department and IRS should have nothing to do with it. When we talk about any president’s “policies,” we act as verbal accomplices to a great crime, namely the rise of executive power during the 20th century. The imperial presidency has not been good for America, and we should resist its language — even the implication that executives (or their staff) should drive legislation. Trump can veto tax bills or sign them, nothing more.

When it come to tax reform, we only need to ask one question: does the proposal reduce or eliminate an existing tax (or taxes)? Beyond that bright line test, complexity serves only as a tool for Congress to obscure the truth. If a proposal is complex it’s probably no good.

Note: The views expressed on Mises.org are not necessarily those of the Mises Institute.

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3 Comments
Brian
Brian
September 30, 2017 2:54 pm

The tax nightmare is a direct result of the perversion of money. Monetary reform is what is really needed.

The reason you’re paying federal income taxes on your wages is directly linked to the perversion of money under the federal reserve system that Jefferson warned about.

“Paper is poverty. It is only the ghost of money, and not money itself.”

“Paper money is liable to be abused, has been, is, and forever will be abused, in every country in which it is permitted.”

” If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around(these banks) will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.”

“The issuing power of currency shall be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.”

Then there’s Mr. Stamp:
“Banking was conceived in iniquity and was born in sin. The bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create money, and with the flick of the pen they will create enough deposits to buy it back again. However, take away from them the power to create money and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But, if you wish to remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money.”

All of this tax reform shit is just mental masturbation. Money creation is supposed to be a government function. Thereby protecting you from the taxation of it when it is transferred to you; when your time is given to an employer in return for wages.

By allowing the banks to create it…it has become a bank function that can be excise taxed by every damn jurisdiction as they reach deeper and deeper into your lives, collapsing your circle of freedom.

This devious fraud is how they force you to buy healthcare or pay the penalty. Where does it end?

Anon
Anon
September 30, 2017 6:54 pm

Unfortunately, it never does. They continue to tax and force until they come upon a group of folks that have nothing to lose, and simply won’t take it any more. That is what our founders were. British “subjects” that finally had enough, and pushed back. Same with what is happening now in Spain. Pretty simple really, the only thing to hope for is that the push back comes with a more peaceful resolution when it comes, and that the new boss is better than the old one.

doug
doug
September 30, 2017 9:06 pm

We have heard (herd) this my entire life and nothing has changed. How do we eliminate the vipers? First step is to avoid banking and loans-they both empower the vipers. Then remove corporate personhood and do not allow them to contribute(bribe) to politics. After those two it gets easier but who is listening?