A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
14, 2007, AND THEREAFTER
Congressional
and Leftist Lies
An important component of the leftist class warfare agenda
is to condemn President Bush's tax cuts for the rich. This claim is careless,
ignorant or dishonest on at least two counts. First there's the constitutional
issue. Article I, Section 8 reads, "The Congress shall have Power To lay
and collect Taxes . . ." That means the president has no taxing authority.
Presidents can propose or veto taxes and Congress can
override vetoes. The bottom line is that all taxing authority rests with the
U.S. Congress. The next time you hear someone condemn or praise Bush's tax
cuts, ask them whether the Constitution has been amended to give the president
taxing authority.
But what about those tax cuts for the rich? Are the rich now
sharing a smaller burden of the federal income tax because their fair share of
the burden has been shifted to the poor? The most recent Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) statistics can give us some guidance. In 2005, the top 1 percent
of income earners, those with an annual adjusted gross income of $365,000 and
higher, paid 39 percent of all federal income taxes; in 1999, they paid 36
percent.
In 2005, the top 5 percent of income earners, those having
an adjusted gross income of $145,000 and higher, paid 60 percent of all federal
taxes; in 1999, it was 55 percent. The top 10 percent, earning income over
$103,000, paid 70 percent. The top 25 percent, with income of over $62,000,
paid 86 percent, and the top 50 percent, earning $31,000 and higher, paid 97
percent of all federal taxes.
What about any argument suggesting that the burden of taxes
have been shifted to the poor? The bottom 50 percent, earning $30,000 or less,
paid 3 percent of total federal income taxes. In 1999, they paid 4 percent.
Congressmen know all of this, but they attempt to hoodwink the average American
who doesn't.
The fact that there are so many American earners who have
little or no financial stake in our country poses a serious political problem.
The Tax Foundation estimates that 41 percent of whites, 56 percent of blacks,
59 percent of American Indian and Aleut Eskimo and 40 percent Asian and Pacific
Islanders had no 2004 federal income tax liability. The study concluded,
"When all of the dependents of these income-producing households are
counted, there are roughly 122 million Americans -- 44 percent of the U.S.
population -- who are outside of the federal income tax system." These people
represent a natural constituency for big-spending politicians. In other words,
if you have little or no financial stake in America, what do you care about the
cost of massive federal spending programs?
Similarly, what do you care about tax cuts if you're paying
little or no taxes? In fact, you might be openly hostile toward tax cuts out of
fear that they might lead to reductions in handout programs from which you
benefit. Survey polls have confirmed this. According to The Harris Poll taken
in June 2003, 51 percent of Democrats thought the tax cuts enacted by Congress
were a bad thing while 16 percent of Republicans thought so. Among Democrats,
67 percent thought the tax cuts were unfair while 32 percent of Republicans
thought so. When asked whether the $350 billion tax cut package will help your
family finances, 59 percent of those surveyed said no and 35 percent said yes.
Whether you're for or against President Bush matters little,
but what do you think of politicians and their media dupes winning you over
with lies about the rich not paying their fair share? And, by the way, $145,000
or even $345,000 a year hardly qualifies one as rich. It's not even yacht
money.
Walter E. Williams is a professor
of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E.
Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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