[Obama's advisers] said no tax increases were included in the [stimulus] plan because it is focused on measures that create jobs. Obama aides have signaled that they will wait to let Mr. Bush's tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans expire in 2010, rather than try to repeal them right away.
- New York Times, January 4, 2009
Liberals who want to extort untold billions in new taxes from
the "rich" have been mugged by economic reality.
The president-elect has quietly distanced himself from his
campaign pledge to boost the tax burden of the wealthiest five
percent of Americans. It's an implicit acknowledgment that
increasing taxes on our most productive citizens will throttle job
creation and delay economic recovery. So far, so good.
But even as they postpone their soak-the-rich agenda, Obama and
the New Deal revivalists on Capitol Hill are readying a
mind-boggling $1-trillion-plus "stimulus" package - as well as
other budget-busting initiatives, such as universal health care.
Ultimately, taxpayers will have to foot the bill for all of this,
not to mention the grab-bag of "shovel ready" fitness centers,
parking garages, baseball museums, mob museums, and music halls
that Congress intends to fund as public works.
The unstated assumption behind the stimulus package is that
Congress will recoup all this spending a few years down the line by
strapping a hefty tax hike to the backs of a very small minority of
"rich" Americans. Then, all will be well.
Yah. Sure it will.
Before Obama and his Capitol Hill allies open the spending
floodgates even wider, they should study the ongoing saga in New
York State. Empire State politicians recently tried this approach
to budget balancing, and wound up scalded by the financial
meltdown. It turns out that taxing the "rich" is tougher than the
class warriors might think.
First, a little background.
Last August, the hyper-liberal New York State Assembly voted
overwhelmingly to boost the state's top income tax rate on
millionaires by as much as 1.75 percent, thereby jacking the top
rate to 8.6 percent. Albany's green-eyeshades brigade estimated the
tax hike would reap an extra $2.4 billion annually.
But as Wall Street cratered and all those multi-million-dollar
bonuses evaporated, it dawned on Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver
(D.), the brains behind this tax hike, that it wasn't such a bright
idea after all. "Because of what is happening to the New York
economy," a Silver ally helpfully explained to New York Post
columnist Frederic Dicker, "Shelly doesn't believe this is the time
to be raising a tax on the wealthy."
With the Empire State's budget deficit now projected to exceed $15
billion -in the face of a constitutional requirement to balance the
state budget - New York lawmakers are fighting a five-alarm fiscal
fire. But rather than slash billions in wasteful spending (not long
ago, the state's chief Medicaid investigator estimated that 40
percent of New York's Medicaid spending - about $20 billion
annually - was fraudulent or "questionable"), the state's political
class remains committed to raising taxes. And this time, they've
trained their sights not on the barons of Wall Street but on Joe
Sixpack.
Gov. David Paterson (D.) has drawn up a laundry list of 137 tax
increases that target the creature comforts enjoyed by ordinary New
Yorkers. Included are new or increased taxes on soft drinks, malt
beverages, beer, wine, cigars, cable television service, music
downloads, and - most unthinkable of all - a new tax on Knicks
tickets.
"If anybody's contemplating leaving the state of New York," one
Republican lawmaker groused, "this should push them over the
top."
The lesson for Washington is this: The current economic climate is
so dismal that what liberal theorists considered a modest tax
increase on millionaires sent even limousine-liberal New Yorkers
into a tizzy. From Manhattan's co-op canyons and the ritzy
oceanfront palaces of the Hamptons came cries of bloody murder. And
since they're the folks who host and attend political fundraisers,
it quickly became more politically acceptable to raise taxes on Joe
Sixpack's cigarettes and his kids' iPod downloads than on the
earnings of hedge-fund managers.
The liberals' entire class-warfare edifice, it seems, rests on
extremely thin ice. It's New York, New York, for heaven's sake. If
you can't tax the filthy rich there, can you tax them
anywhere?
Obama's tax-the-rich agenda is on even thinner ice. Unlike the
lawmakers in Albany, he believes families with incomes as low as
$250,000 (approximately four million households nationwide) qualify
as "rich." Yet the overwhelming majority of these "rich" reside in
states and congressional districts represented by his fellow
Democrats. Obama may well discover that slapping new taxes on these
4 million households will give an unwanted political headache to
those same liberal lawmakers whose votes will be required for its
passage.
If the New York experience is any guide, Americans may already
have reached the limits of politically acceptable taxation. Even
before the financial meltdown, the national tax burden stood at
about 19 percent of GDP, higher than the post-World War II norm and
awfully close to the 20 percent level that has marked previous
taxpayer revolts.
Lawmakers in Washington have displayed zero inclination to
actually cut spending. And now we see that the politically
acceptable default is to raise taxes on ordinary Americans.
Clearly, the incoming administration and its allies on Capitol
Hill aim to spend literally trillions - trillions - of our tax
dollars in the coming months without enacting any of the offsets
that were promised so earnestly by their leadership.
Get ready, Middle America, for the largest, across-the-board tax
increase in our history.
Mike Franc is Vice President for Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
[Obama's advisers] said no tax increases were included in the [stimulus] plan because it is focused on measures that create jobs. Obama aides have signaled that they will wait to let Mr. Bush's tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans expire in 2010, rather than try to repeal them right away.
- New York Times, January 4, 2009
Liberals who want to extort untold billions in new taxes from
the "rich" have been mugged by economic reality.
The president-elect has quietly distanced himself from his
campaign pledge to boost the tax burden of the wealthiest five
percent of Americans. It's an implicit acknowledgment that
increasing taxes on our most productive citizens will throttle job
creation and delay economic recovery. So far, so good.
But even as they postpone their soak-the-rich agenda, Obama and
the New Deal revivalists on Capitol Hill are readying a
mind-boggling $1-trillion-plus "stimulus" package - as well as
other budget-busting initiatives, such as universal health care.
Ultimately, taxpayers will have to foot the bill for all of this,
not to mention the grab-bag of "shovel ready" fitness centers,
parking garages, baseball museums, mob museums, and music halls
that Congress intends to fund as public works.
The unstated assumption behind the stimulus package is that
Congress will recoup all this spending a few years down the line by
strapping a hefty tax hike to the backs of a very small minority of
"rich" Americans. Then, all will be well.
Yah. Sure it will.
Before Obama and his Capitol Hill allies open the spending
floodgates even wider, they should study the ongoing saga in New
York State. Empire State politicians recently tried this approach
to budget balancing, and wound up scalded by the financial
meltdown. It turns out that taxing the "rich" is tougher than the
class warriors might think.
First, a little background.
Last August, the hyper-liberal New York State Assembly voted
overwhelmingly to boost the state's top income tax rate on
millionaires by as much as 1.75 percent, thereby jacking the top
rate to 8.6 percent. Albany's green-eyeshades brigade estimated the
tax hike would reap an extra $2.4 billion annually.
But as Wall Street cratered and all those multi-million-dollar
bonuses evaporated, it dawned on Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver
(D.), the brains behind this tax hike, that it wasn't such a bright
idea after all. "Because of what is happening to the New York
economy," a Silver ally helpfully explained to New York Post
columnist Frederic Dicker, "Shelly doesn't believe this is the time
to be raising a tax on the wealthy."
With the Empire State's budget deficit now projected to exceed $15
billion -in the face of a constitutional requirement to balance the
state budget - New York lawmakers are fighting a five-alarm fiscal
fire. But rather than slash billions in wasteful spending (not long
ago, the state's chief Medicaid investigator estimated that 40
percent of New York's Medicaid spending - about $20 billion
annually - was fraudulent or "questionable"), the state's political
class remains committed to raising taxes. And this time, they've
trained their sights not on the barons of Wall Street but on Joe
Sixpack.
Gov. David Paterson (D.) has drawn up a laundry list of 137 tax
increases that target the creature comforts enjoyed by ordinary New
Yorkers. Included are new or increased taxes on soft drinks, malt
beverages, beer, wine, cigars, cable television service, music
downloads, and - most unthinkable of all - a new tax on Knicks
tickets.
"If anybody's contemplating leaving the state of New York," one
Republican lawmaker groused, "this should push them over the
top."
The lesson for Washington is this: The current economic climate is
so dismal that what liberal theorists considered a modest tax
increase on millionaires sent even limousine-liberal New Yorkers
into a tizzy. From Manhattan's co-op canyons and the ritzy
oceanfront palaces of the Hamptons came cries of bloody murder. And
since they're the folks who host and attend political fundraisers,
it quickly became more politically acceptable to raise taxes on Joe
Sixpack's cigarettes and his kids' iPod downloads than on the
earnings of hedge-fund managers.
The liberals' entire class-warfare edifice, it seems, rests on
extremely thin ice. It's New York, New York, for heaven's sake. If
you can't tax the filthy rich there, can you tax them
anywhere?
Obama's tax-the-rich agenda is on even thinner ice. Unlike the
lawmakers in Albany, he believes families with incomes as low as
$250,000 (approximately four million households nationwide) qualify
as "rich." Yet the overwhelming majority of these "rich" reside in
states and congressional districts represented by his fellow
Democrats. Obama may well discover that slapping new taxes on these
4 million households will give an unwanted political headache to
those same liberal lawmakers whose votes will be required for its
passage.
If the New York experience is any guide, Americans may already
have reached the limits of politically acceptable taxation. Even
before the financial meltdown, the national tax burden stood at
about 19 percent of GDP, higher than the post-World War II norm and
awfully close to the 20 percent level that has marked previous
taxpayer revolts.
Lawmakers in Washington have displayed zero inclination to
actually cut spending. And now we see that the politically
acceptable default is to raise taxes on ordinary Americans.
Clearly, the incoming administration and its allies on Capitol
Hill aim to spend literally trillions - trillions - of our tax
dollars in the coming months without enacting any of the offsets
that were promised so earnestly by their leadership.
Get ready, Middle America, for the largest, across-the-board tax
increase in our history.
Mike Franc is Vice President for Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First Appeared on National Review Online