Imagine a law that affected everyone in the country but was so
confusing that only a select few could understand it. And those
select few didn't even include the people who enforced the
law.
That may sound like a recipe for disaster. Actually, it's a
description of our current tax policy.
Almost 900 tax forms are in use today. It takes more than 60,000
pages of laws, regulations and IRS rulings to explain how we are
supposed to fill out those forms. According to the National
Taxpayers Union, the average American needs more than 28 hours to
complete a 1040 form, a collective waste of some 6 billion
hours.
And because so many worry about making a mistake, more and more
people turn to professional preparers. Almost two-thirds of
Americans now pay someone else to do their taxes.
We can fix this. But will we?
The president's panel on tax reform is due to release its
recommendations soon. Almost anything it suggests is likely to be
an improvement -- how much worse could the system possibly get? But
as long as we're going to try to fix the tax system, we ought to do
more than make small changes around the edges. It's time to implement a flat
tax.
A flat tax would be simple. There would be a set rate, say 17
percent, which all citizens would pay. We could toss out all the
forms and regulations. An individual's return could be filed on a
simple postcard, which would take minutes, not hours, to fill
out.
It also would be fair. Our current system is so loaded with
credits, deductions and exemptions that virtually nobody can
understand it. Even IRS employees frequently get things wrong. A
2001 study found that when taxpayers called the IRS for advice,
they got the wrong answer almost half the time.
A flat tax would help fuel our already booming economy as well. One
Harvard economist estimates tax reform could boost national wealth
by nearly $5 trillion. That's because, under a flat tax system that
doesn't punish people for saving and investing, everyone's assets
would be worth more.
Then there's the benefit of all the time and money we'd save.
Americans today spend more than $100 billion on lawyers,
accountants and tax preparers. That money would be far better
invested in 401(k)s, bonds and homes.
Our current tax code is a disaster, but it's no accident. For
decades, politicians have used it to attempt to shape personal
behavior. Washington wants you to drive a hybrid car, so it will
give you a tax deduction when you do. Washington wants to promote
renewable fuels, so it gives tax breaks to manufacturers. And on
and on and on, for thousands of pages.
But it's really none of Washington's business what type of car you
drive or what type of fuel you put in it. Under a flat-tax system,
Washington would go back to minding its own business.
And in a blow for fairness, a rich person who earns 100 times what
the average person makes would pay 100 times as much in taxes as
the average person. Wiping out the deductions would make the system
transparent and fair.
At the same time, one critical loophole would be retained. Every
household would still receive a large exemption based on family
size. A family of four, for instance, would pay no taxes on its
first $30,000 in earnings. That will protect middle-class Americans
against a tax increase under the new system.
Sometimes, in politics as in football, you have to throw deep to
make any progress. A flat tax is a big idea that would change the
system for the better. The presidential panel ought to recommend it
and fight politically for it. Anything less would be a missed
opportunity.
Ed
Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
institute.
COMMENTARY Taxes
Flat-Out Smart
Oct 25, 2005 2 min read
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