March
8, 2006
End
the $100 Billion Witch Hunt
The
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) claims in a February 2006 report that for
every dollar spent chasing unpaid taxes, they can recover about $4 for
federal coffers. To close the expected 2005 “tax gap,” the IRS would
have to spend $100 billion in an attempt to recover $400 billion. That’s
$100 billion of our tax dollars spent to hunt us down for unavoidable
errors trying to comply with the tax code.
It’s
not enough that many of us have to write checks to the IRS this time of
year. Congress wants to write the IRS a bigger check to chase down our
unavoidable errors.
U.S.
senators from both sides of the aisle are predictably enraged that
taxpayers would dare underreport their incomes, and liberal media
stories gleefully note that the tax gap could nearly pay off the federal
budget deficit. There is a fairer and more inexpensive way for Congress
to pay off the deficit – stop overspending. The media’s story angle
conveniently avoids the fact that members of Congress – not taxpayers –
write the confusing tax laws and authorize all deficit spending.
In
response to the IRS report, Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA), chairman of
the Senate Finance Committee, vowed to hunt down taxpayers who
supposedly abuse the tax code by inflating the value of their charitable
contributions and deductions.
Senator Grassley, why don’t we hunt down those in Congress who waste our
tax dollars on failed entitlement programs and pork projects? Senator
Kent Conrad (D-ND), ranking Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee
declared, “It just leaps out at you as one of the most significant
opportunities we have.” What should leap out at you is the fact that
lawmakers produce deficit spending and the confusing tax code.
Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Treasury, predicted this
would happen. In Federalist Paper Number 12, written in 1787, Hamilton
cautioned the negative effects of a system of direct taxation. These
effects included perpetual addition of new tax laws, new collection
methods and the noncompliance that would necessarily follow. Mr.
Hamilton was correct, to the tune of $400 billion today.
Without an income tax code, the federal government cannot as easily
monitor our economic activities, and Congress cannot write new tax laws
advantageous to their preferred groups. These facts were perhaps no
better articulated than by Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY), who last year
stated at a fundraiser, “We’re going to take things away from you on
behalf of the common good.” Translation: “We’re going to take more of
your money so we can buy more votes.” It is time Congress stopped
robbing us of our liberties by taxing our income and our time.
We now
have a significant opportunity to replace the confusing income tax code
mess with a consumption tax – an opportunity that Congress has
squandered. Even Hamilton recognized the advantages of a consumption tax
over a direct income tax in Federalist Paper Number 21, also written in
1787,
“The
amount to be contributed by each citizen will in a degree be at his own
option, and can be regulated by an attention to his resources. The rich
may be extravagant, the poor can be frugal; and private oppression may
always be avoided by a judicious selection of objects proper for such
impositions.”
Under
a consumption tax such as a national sales tax, also called the FairTax
(HR 25 and S 25), we would do away forever with automatic withholding,
the alternative minimum tax and forced FICA deductions. We would, for
the first time since 1913, regain our economic freedom.
Following the release of the aforementioned IRS report commissioner Mark
Everson stated, “At some point you get to a tradeoff between liberties
and closing that gap.” Let’s do both, by replacing the tax code with the
FairTax. The $400 billion gap will go away, and our liberties will
return.
© 2006 North Star Writers
Group. May not be republished without permission.
Click here to talk to our writers and
editors about this column and others in our discussion forum.
To e-mail feedback about this column,
click here. If you enjoy this writer's
work, please contact your local newspapers editors and ask them to carry
it.
This
is Column # HC4.
Request permission to publish here.
|