Loopholes: Another Word for Freedom
Jeffrey Tucker
Laissez Faire Books
October 18th, 2012
Reader Views: 852
Letâs say that a thief demands $100 and lets you keep $10 because he likes your suit. He calls that a deduction. The next day, he demands the whole $110. He says that he is not stealing more. He is only eliminating deductions and closing loopholes. Thatâs the GOPâs tax plan in a nutshell.
They say that it is not about raising your taxes. Thatâs what Democrats do, and Republicans donât do that sort of thing. Instead, Republicans favor the âflat taxâ that is ârevenue neutral.â They will âpay for the tax cutsâ by capping deductions on high income earners. Or perhaps they will just remove the mortgage interest deduction or other âloopholesâ that allow you to keep more of your money.
How stupid do they think we are? Sadly, they might be right. Most peopleâs eyes glaze over when politicians start talking tax reform. They understand that âraising taxesâ is generally bad, but they do not understand that âeliminating deductionsâ amounts to the same thing. Either way, you pay. The only real difference is the public relations pitch.
Actually, the GOP has been raising taxes for decades, just less openly so. Reaganâs tax increase of 1983, as recommended by the Greenspan Commission, was disguised as a premium increase to save Social Security, but it was actually a gigantic increase in the payroll tax that was later applied to general revenue. It put off the endgame for Social Security for a while, but for the average taxpayer, it was nothing but a tax increase.
This tax has extracted some $2.5 trillion since it was first enacted. Somehow, Reagan maintained his reputation as a tax cutter, and still does to this day. It has something to do with the need for partisan illusions. Premiums, they tell us, are not taxes. The same thing is happening with the Romney ticket. It is out there every day talking about raising taxes, just with a different name, yet the Democrats blast back with the claim that the Republicans are busting the budget with proposed tax cuts.
Both parties are pushing for some kind of tax reform, but the key rule is ârevenue neutrality.â All these plans are doped out with the presumption that the planners can perfectly anticipate future revenue, but the regime change has no effect whatsoever on peopleâs behavior in the marketplace.
They presume that a cut here will decrease revenue by a certain amount and that an increase there will increase revenue by a certain amount. The truth is that you canât know. No one expected or anticipated that government revenue would collapse after 2008, for example, and that was with no tax overhaul at all. The political parties can cite all the âstudiesâ they want, but no one can perfectly anticipate the effects of changes in the tax law.
In effect, the rule of ârevenue neutralityâ means that no one is talking about serious change in taxes at all beyond increasing them in more or less serious ways. Itâs the same with spending cuts: Politicians can talk about them, but they will not deliver them so long as the Federal Reserve stands in the background ready to print any amount money to cover any amount of debt that the Congress runs up.
If anything, the GOP position is the more dishonest of the two parties because the GOP is forever claiming that the Democrats want to raise taxes whereas the GOP does not. The truth is that both parties have their green eyes fixed on your bank account with the intent to grab more one way or another. The choice voters face really comes down to how they want their tax increases packaged: as a hurt-the-rich scheme or as a flat-tax scheme.
Every tax reform in my lifetime has actually been a push for higher taxes in one form or another. And there are still other ways to raise taxes besides raising taxes, reducing deductions, capping deductions, and closing loopholes. You can raise tariffs, increase user fees, enact quotas, inflate the money supply, or outright confiscate peopleâs property through police state tactics. All these methods suck resources from the private economy into the government.
The goal of every tax reform is to do this in the sneakiest way possible.
The media are no help in clarifying language. When a politician proposes a cut in taxes, the reporter imagines that he or she is a clever and hard-hitting journalist by shooting back: âHow are you go to pay for that?â Nonsense. If the thief decides not to take your wallet, he shouldnât be asked how he is going to pay for his failure to steal.
Of course, all of this is beside the point, really. The core problem is spending. If the government didnât spend money, it wouldnât need to tax anyone. The only real way to lower taxes over the long run is to cut spending, but again, this is not going to happen. Even those who talk about spending cuts are really talking about cutting the rate of increase in spending over five or 10 years in budget projections that have never panned out even one time in the history of the universe.
Knowing all of this makes you doubt the whole point of these ridiculous political debates. Yes, thatâs the idea. It is worse than pure entertainment because the whole show masks the greatest racket in the world today. A useless elite is living off your money and telling you that you are better off as a result. And when you question why, they throw accounting trickery and fancy language in your face that all amounts to the same thing: The beatings will continue so long as you donât run away.
And running away is precisely what is happening. The lower on the list of economically free countries the U.S slips, the more people are looking to the underground economy or to emigration to protect their own freedom. What this suggests is that the scam isnât working as well as it used to. Itâs long past time that people stop believing these thieves, much less trusting their motives.
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Jeffrey Tucker is the publisher and executive editor of Laissez-Faire Books, and the author of Bourbon for Breakfast: Living Outside the Statist Quo and It’s a Jetsons World: Private Miracles and Public Crimes, among thousands of articles.
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Contributed by Jeffrey Tucker of Laissez Faire Books.
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I say we the people hold a refferendum and give all the politicians their walking papers and start from scratch, abolish all the various department of this and bureau of that, make the controll of most things be at the state level, and just elect reps to oversee the military, make that a 50/50 responsibility between the state governors and the elected rep of the department of national defense. Bring all our people home, no more wars, charge a tarriff on anything from a foreign nation and stop exporting our natural resources. Limit any political office to 2 terms PERIOD. No pensions, no health insurance, no ongoing anything. Hold a refferendum on all existing laws to determine their fate, do away with the supreme court. Etc etc etc the list can go on, if we get rid of 1/2 of the laws and half of the taxes and almost all of the federal bureaucracy we will remove the biggest problem we have as a country, our president should be no more than the guy who shakes the rep of the other countries hand to deliver the results of our referendums, he will be elected to a 4 year term and will always be of at least 60 years of age and elected by a majority vote of at least 51% of the umber of votes, no more electoral colledge bullshit. YOU GET THE DRIFT