Tag Archives: government

Income Tax Insanity

Income Tax Insanity by Peter Burrows 4/23/25  elburropete@gmail.com  

One of the worst ideas the Trump Administration has come up with is to eliminate income taxes for those making $150,000 a year or less. This might make short-term political sense, but in the long run it will make controlling the size of the government even harder than it is now. 

It would mean only 7 percent of US citizens would pay 100 percent of the income tax. The other 93 percent would pay zero percent and have no incentive to reduce government spending or oppose future tax increases. It’s bad enough now, with the bottom 93 percent paying only 24 percent of all the income tax revenue while the top one percent pays about 40 percent. That’s worth repeating: the top one percent pays 40 percent of the total. 

Ironically, when Bernie Sanders, or some other demagogue, rants about “tax cuts for the rich,” there’s some truth in that because it’s “the rich” who are paying most of the taxes, certainly more than their “fair share.    

Such demagoguery surrounding the income tax has been going on for over 100 years, almost since it was authorized by the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913. At the time, less than 1% of Americans had to pay the tax. If you are thinking something along the lines of “camel-nose-tent,” me too. 

I’m also reminded of something noted almost 200 years ago by French philosopher and historian Alexis de Tocqueville: “A democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.”  Voters are thus more likely to vote for tax increases because, after all. the tax doesn’t hit thee or me, only the guy behind the tree, to paraphrase an old saw.  

In the long run, Trump’s tax could motivate people with high incomes – who are not necessarily rich — to find other places to live where success isn’t penalized, or to do things to reduce their taxable income, such as buying tax-free bonds instead of “plowing another field.” 

Much depends upon the actual rate at which income is taxed. A top rate of 25-30% is probably not high enough to motivate very many people to avoid paying taxes. Currently, the top rate is 37% which kicks in for joint returns over $751,000 in income. Paradoxically, more revenue might be raised from those taxpayers if the tax rate was LOWERED from 37%.  

This is something that’s also been known for over 100 years. Here’s what Calvin Coolidge said in 1924: “The first object of taxation is to secure revenue. When the taxation of large incomes is approached with this in view, the problem is to find a rate which will produce the largest returns. Experience does not show that the higher rate produces the larger revenue —” 

President Kennedy said something similar in 1962: “It is a paradoxical truth that the tax rates are too high today and tax revenues are too low and the soundest way to raise the revenues in the long run is to cut the rates now.”  President Reagan’s tax cuts were justified with the same reasoning. 

In 1974, economist Art Laffer famously sketched on a napkin a simple graph showing this trade-off between tax rates and tax revenues, which became known as the Laffer Curve. Still, almost 60 years later, the idea that you can increase tax revenues by decreasing the tax rate on high incomes doesn’t seem to have sunk in. This means that it is inevitable, with 93% of the income earners paying no income taxes, that some demagogue will campaign – and win – calling for higher tax rates on “the rich.” 

I wish Trump would have instead called for a flat tax on ALL incomes. Flat tax proposals have been around for years, but such a tax has such powerful opposition that it’s never had a realistic chance of becoming law.  With Trump as President, however, and with Trump actively supporting it, a flat tax proposal would at least get a good hearing in Congress.  

While it wouldn’t get through THIS Congress, it could start a discussion that might mean a future congress would enact a flat tax. It’s a discussion well worth having. A flat text has three very attractive features: 1) Almost all income earners would have a stake in how the government spends our money, “skin in the game,” so to speak.  2) It would dramatically simplify tax preparation: “1040 on a postcard.” 3) Such simplification would mean the IRS doesn’t have to be nearly as big as it is. 

A key feature of a flat tax is that only standard deductions are allowed for individuals: one for the filer, one for the spouse, and a standard deduction for every dependent.  No other deductions are allowed. That would mean no deductions for charitable donations, religious contributions, interest on your home mortgage, 501(c)(3)s etc. None. Nada. 

As you can imagine, a flat tax doesn’t get a lot of support from real estate agents, charities, tax preparers or anybody who’s income depends upon tax deductible contributions or a complex tax code. Those on the left will also argue that we need a progressive tax code to ensure that the rich pay their “fair share,” as if 40 percent from the top one percent isn’t enough.  

In fact, another attractive feature of a flat text is that the “fair share” lie would be easier to refute. Here’s an example of how that would work:   

Assume standard deductions for a couple filing a joint return of $10,000 each and $5,000 for each child. A couple with two children would thus have $30,000 of deductions. On an income of $40,000, they would therefore have taxable income of $10,000. If their income is doubled to $80,000, their taxable income is $50,000. Summary: 2X the income but 5X the income tax. I think that would sound “fair” to most people. 

As desirable as a flat tax may be, we’ll never get one without a Constitutional amendment imposing term limits for Congress. As it is, too many in Congress want to get re-elected above all else, and they’ll follow the dictates of the tax lawyers, the charities and all the nonprofits such as Planned Parenthood, the Sierra Club Foundation, BLM, even the Metropolitan Opera, and on and on. 

I’m afraid we’re stuck with a needlessly complex and unfair income tax. I’m disappointed that Trump hasn’t done anything to fix it, but maybe President Vance will.   

“So now, what’s your take on the significant discrepancy between average pay for workers and corporate CEOs?”

“So now, what’s your take on the significant discrepancy between average pay for workers and corporate CEOs?”  by Peter Burrows elburropete@gmail.com 4/18/24 

(Another question asked by Cousin Deb, a retired professor at Cornell University. She has a Ph.D. in Education, which she is valiantly trying to overcome. This is my emailed response.)   

The CEO- average worker pay gap? Oh, that’s something I worry about all the time. I can barely sleep at night thinking about that terrible, horrible injustice.  

Please. What corporations pay their CEOs and their workers are free market transactions, willingly entered into by consenting adults. Frankly, it’s none of my business and it’s none of yours.  

I realize that people whose sense of cosmic justice is offended by what they consider to be “too much,” whether a pay gap, or a salary or whatever, would like to pass a few laws to “correct” these things. Send in the Government. Badges and guns. Right. 

You and I can make it our business by buying a single share in the offending corporation, attend the annual meeting and propose to shareholders that we owners adjust that CEO worker average pay gap. Now if we can’t get enough shareholders to agree with us, what we can then do is gather like-minded people together and buy enough shares to simply take over the company or buy enough so we can control the board of directors.  

Or maybe we can start our own company to compete against that evil corporation. Or maybe just boycott their products.  

Gosh, all that would take a lot of work and might mean risking — GASP – our own money! Oh no. Pass a law. Send in the cops! Typical authoritarian impulse of the morally superior elitist, to whom I ask: “Who made you God?”  

It happens across the political spectrum, depending on the issue. Too many people want to use the power of government to “do good,” e.g., some pro-lifers would jail anybody involved in an abortion, nurses to patients. Sigh. 

Also, the pay gap that knots the knickers on elitist pinheads sometimes includes the result of stock options or stock sales, which can really skew the results. For example, a few years ago Elon Musk sold $3.5 billion in Tesla stock. That kind of alters the average pay gap, doesn’t it? 

More typically, it’s stock options the CEO cashes in that causes lots of heavy breathing in the same crowd that has no problem with Claudine Gay getting paid $900K. Harvard is private, so I could give a rat’s ass. 

I do give a rat’s ass when the president of our local WNMU is paid damn near $400k a year for a state job that I suspect could be done for much less. The government bureaucrats just take tax dollars and pay each other whatever they think they’re worth. I don’t like it but not much I can do about it but vote for people like me — or become a PhD. and cash in too!  (;~) 

I do have a slight problem with somebody like Elon Musk making billions upon billions when Tesla’s business, from cars to batteries, basically depends upon government mandates and tons of subsidies. He was smart enough to cash in, so I guess I can’t blame him for taking advantage of government stupidity. That stupidity IS our business! 

One last thing, The people who talk about taxing the billionaires as if those billionaires did something wrong or evil, don’t seem to realize that the great preponderance of billionaires in this country support liberal causes. The Google boys, Zuckerberg, Gates, Buffett, Bezos and on and on and on.  

I’d rather have a society where entrepreneurs get filthy rich, even liberal ones, than live in a society that punishes success out of some moral outrage at a perceived “inequality.” Bezos has billions of dollars in Amazon stock, the price of which is in some small part due to my business at Amazon and thank you Jeff, you liberal asshole. He didn’t steal a penny of his wealth and I have benefited greatly from his genius.   

I say don’t put extra taxes on any billionaire, lib or otherwise, because that means taking money out of private hands and putting it in government hands. No thank you. The government didn’t earn that money, in spite of what Obama says.  

The same goes for estate taxes, which should be zero. People who think heirs shouldn’t enjoy money that they didn’t earn are making moral judgments, playing God again. That also takes money out of the private sector and puts it in the public sector, where it’s usually wasted.  

Other than that, Deb, I don’t have any opinion on the topic.