ElExtremo1312
Slaves to Words
By Thomas Sowell ·
Tuesday, May 17, 2011Hotmail - rtb6...@hotmail.com
We could definitely use another Abraham Lincoln to emancipate us
all from being slaves to words. In the midst of a historic financial
crisis of unprecedented government spending, and a national debt that
outstrips even the debt accumulated by the reckless government spending
of previous administration, we are still enthralled by words and
ignoring realities.
President Barack Obama's constant talk about "millionaires and
billionaires" needing to pay higher taxes would be a bad joke, if the
consequences were not so serious. Even if the income tax rate were
raised to 100 percent on millionaires and billionaires, it would still
not cover the trillions of dollars the government is spending.
More fundamentally, tax rates -- whatever they are -- are just words
on paper. Only the hard cash that comes in can cover government
spending. History has shown repeatedly, under administrations of both
political parties, that there is no automatic correlation between tax
rates and tax revenues.
When the tax rate on the highest incomes was 73 percent in 1921, that
brought in less tax revenue than after the tax rate was cut to 24
percent in 1925. Why? Because high tax rates that people don't actually
pay do not bring in as much hard cash as lower tax rates that they do
pay. That's not rocket science.
Then and now, people with the highest incomes have had the greatest
flexibility as to where they will put their money. Buying tax-exempt
bonds is just one of the many ways that "millionaires and billionaires"
avoid paying hard cash to the government, no matter how high the tax
rates go.
Most working people don't have the same options. Their taxes have been taken out of their paychecks before they get them.
Even more so today than in the 1920s, billions of dollars can be sent
overseas electronically, almost instantaneously, to be invested in
other countries -- creating jobs there, while millions of American are
unemployed. That is a very high price to pay for class warfare rhetoric
about taxing "millionaires and billionaires."
Make no mistake about it, that kind of rhetoric wins votes for
political demagogues -- and votes are their bottom line. But that is
totally different from saying that it will bring in more tax revenue to
the government.
Time and again, at both state and federal levels, in the country and
in other countries, tax rates and tax revenue have moved in opposite
directions many times. After Maryland raised its tax rates on people
making a million dollars a year, there were fewer such people living in
Maryland -- and less tax revenue was collected from them.
In 2009, many people specializing in high finance in Britain
relocated to Switzerland after the British government announced plans to
take 51 percent of high incomes in taxes.
Conversely, reductions in tax rates can lead to more tax revenue
being collected. After the capital gains tax rate was cut in the United
States in 1997, the government collected nearly twice as much revenue
from capital gains taxes in the next four years as in the previous four
years.
Similar things have happened in India and in Iceland.
There is no automatic correlation between the direction in which tax
rates move and the direction in which tax revenues move. Nor is this a
new discovery.
Back in the 1920s, Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon pointed
out that people with high incomes were simply not paying the high tax
rates that existed on paper, because they were putting their money into
tax shelters.
After the tax rates were cut, as Mellon advocated, investments flowed
back into the private economy, producing higher output, rising incomes,
more tax revenue and more jobs. The annual unemployment rate in the
next four years never exceeded 4.2 percent, and in one year was as low
as 1.8 percent.
Despite political demagoguery about "tax cuts for the rich," in human
terms the rich have less at stake than working people. Precisely
because the rich have so many ways of avoiding taxes, a high tax rate is
likely to do them far less harm than it does to the economy, on which
millions of people depend for jobs.