While Americans struggle to comply with one of
the world's most complicated tax codes, it's worth noting that
about one-dozen nations have adopted simple and fair flat-tax
systems.
Hong Kong has had a flat tax for nearly 60 years, and has gone from
being one of the poorest places on the planet to a first-class
economic powerhouse. Even the rulers in Beijing who now control the
former British colony are smart enough to realize that it would be
foolish to change course and kill the proverbial goose.
Too bad American politicians aren't as economically astute as
Chinese communists. Congress occasionally pays lip service to
fundamental tax reform, but the House and Senate can't even agree
to extend the lower tax rates on dividends and capital gains --
even though the economy has been booming ever since those
supply-side provisions were enacted in 2003.
Unfortunately, there are several reasons why taxpayers shouldn't
expect politicians to fix America's corrupt tax system. The first
is that politicians of both parties are hopelessly addicted to big
government. Democrats actually think it's a virtue to make America
more like France by spending taxpayer money like drunken sailors.
Republicans pretend they prefer smaller government, but the past
five years show that their compulsion to spend other people's money
rivals the need of a drug addict to get another fix.
Regardless of motive, it's difficult to improve the tax code when
government spending is growing three times faster than inflation.
The fight over dividends and capital gains is a good example. Ever
since those tax-rate reductions were enacted, economic growth has
been so strong that federal tax revenues have increased by about
8.7 percent annually. But Republicans and Democrats are spending
the extra revenue with abandon. Government spending since 2003 has
increased by an average of 7.8 percent!
Not surprisingly, the politicians who are first in line to spend
other people's money are now engaged in phony hand-wringing about
deficits. They piously assert that the nation cannot afford to
extend the tax cuts. If they were being honest, they would admit
they want to raise taxes back to 2003 levels so they can increase
spending even faster (and make the deficit bigger since a tax hike
will slow growth).
As bad as the situation is today, it's going to get worse. Thanks
to irresponsible legislation such as the prescription-drug
entitlement, long-term projections show that government, left on
auto-pilot, will expand dramatically over the next 30 years.
Needless to say, if America has a France-sized bloated government,
we'll likely have an oppressive French-type tax system to go along
with it.
The second problem is that the politics of hate-and-envy still rein
supreme. Many elected officials use the tax code to exploit class
warfare for political gain, and their top goal is to impose high
tax rates on the so-called rich. This is a particularly destructive
impulse since tax rates often are set so high that the economy
suffers (thus hurting those of us without Donald Trump-sized
wallets) and tax revenues go down rather than up (thus depriving
politicians of money they can use to buy votes).
The fight over dividends and capital gains is a good example. The
stock market has jumped since these tax cuts were enacted in 2003
and the economy is growing much faster. As a result, the government
is collecting more money, especially from taxpayers with larger
incomes. Yet many politicians refuse to extend these tax cuts.
Bizarrely, they're willing to hurt everyone else just to penalize
those who contribute most to U.S. competitiveness.
The third problem is special-interest corruption -- the biggest
obstacle. Politicians can raise a lot of money by trading tax
loopholes for campaign cash. Lower taxes are a great thing, but
carving out special tax shelters for interest groups with richest
lobbyists is not a recipe for a pro-growth tax system. Indeed,
special tax breaks harm growth, since they lure people into making
decisions for tax reasons rather than what makes sense from a
business perspective. Not only that, every special tax break
creates a risk that politicians will raise tax rates on work,
saving and investment to compensate for the foregone revenue.
The internal revenue code is a giant mess, and it's getting worse
every year. A flat tax would solve many problems. But there's
little reason to expect politicians to move in this direction.
After all, the current system works fine for them.
Daniel J.
Mitchell is the McKenna senior fellow in Political
Economy at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times