Here's the WHCA Dinner Shooter's Manifesto
Francesca Hong Just Offered a Frightening Glimpse Into How She'd Run Wisconsin
Wisconsin Brewery Laments Failed Assassination Attempt Against Trump With Sick Promise to...
Jamie Raskin Is Unaware of the Heated Rhetoric From Democrats. Let's Remind Him.
Sleepwalking into Chaos
Michigan Husband and Wife Team Allegedly Scammed $1.2M in PPP Funds
Obama, New York Times Say the Motive Behind Latest Trump Assassination Attempt Is...
'Fraud As a Way of Life': Indiana Man Sentenced for PPP Loans, Identity...
The Leftist Death Cult
You Won't Believe Who the Left Blames for Last Night's Assassination Attempt
WHCA Shooter Attended a No Kings Rally. Sorry, Media, I Think We Know...
Trump Pushes White House Ballroom After Gunman Targets Officials at DC Dinner
Police Just Stopped Another Transgender School Shooting Before it Could Happen
Violent Illegal Alien Arrested After Assaulting and Biting Young Child in San Antonio
Trump Just Took a Major Step Toward Beautifying Washington, D.C.
OPINION

More Cutting, Less Taxing

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
More Cutting, Less Taxing

Another Tax Day, another check to Uncle Sam. For at least one day out of the year, Americans are reminded -- often painfully -- how much government costs.

But is it as bad as it seems? No. It’s worse. What most Americans pay in income taxes can give them a distorted view of just how much government they’re paying for.

Advertisement

If policymakers didn’t engage in “deficit spending” -- i.e., borrowing money that taxpayers will have to pay back, with interest -- our tax bill this year would be much higher.

So how bad would it be if Washington billed us for what they’re spending? Let’s look at the numbers. In 2010, the government took in around $2.2 trillion in taxes. (The income tax accounts for less than half of that: $900 billion, to be specific.) And what did the government spend? Around $3.5 trillion.

You don’t need a calculator to realize that this doesn’t add up. The government is spending $1.3 trillion more than it takes in in taxes. Where does that extra money come from? It’s borrowed, of course. If the federal government tried to collect as much money as it spends, income-tax revenues would need to increase by about 150 percent. And since nearly half of all Americans pay no income taxes, those who do pay would see their tax bills skyrocket.

Say you’re a family of four earning $50,000 and taking the standard deduction. Your current tax bill of $766 would go up by almost $4,000. It’s worse if you’re making $75,000: The tax bill jumps from $4,500 to $13,500. And if you earn $100,000 … well, if you think a tax bill of $8,800 is bad, wait until you get one for $24,400.

Advertisement

Obviously, such tax hikes would amount to economic suicide. Politically, it would be laughable. But heaven forbid our elected officials curb their fiscal appetites. So they opt for the seemingly safe middle path of deficit spending.

I say “seemingly” because, like so many short-term solutions, this doesn’t solve the problem. In fact, it masks it (temporarily) and makes it worse. Like sweeping dirt under a rug, or hurriedly stuffing misplaced belongings into a closet, it can’t go on forever. Sooner or later, the bill must be paid. And however much it may hurt to cut spending now, it’s nothing compared to how painful it will be when we have to do it down the road.

Carrying such a load of debt also means we’re courting higher interest rates on our borrowing. “U.S. Lacks Credibility on Debt, Says IMF” reads a recent headline in the Financial Times. The International Monetary Fund, in what the paper calls “an unusually stern rebuke to its largest shareholder,” says the U.S. is “the only advanced economy to be increasing its underlying budget deficit in 2011, at a time when its economy was growing fast enough to reduce borrowing.”

Yet President Obama and many in Congress refuse to face reality. They’ll concede the need to cut spending … then trot out a figure that may sound large, but actually amounts to little more than a rounding error. Meanwhile, the entitlement programs that consume the bulk of our spending -- Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid -- remain virtually untouched.

Advertisement

Worse, President Obama is playing the old class-warfare card -- calling for, yes, increased taxes on the wealthiest Americans. Never mind that the top 1 percent of taxpayers already pay about 40 percent of the income tax burden, or that such tax hikes would discourage the very kind of job-creating investments that the top taxpayers are in a unique position to make. Some perspective is in order. “We don’t have a trillion-dollar debt because we haven’t taxed enough,” President Reagan once said. “We have a trillion-dollar debt because we spend too much.”

It’s truer now than it was then. It’s time to cut more, not tax more.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement