By Thomas Sowell
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
At the recent televised debate among candidates for the
Democrats’ nomination for president, Hillary Clinton declared that “the wealthy
pay too little” in taxes and “the middle class pays too much.”
Some people might wish to argue about whether that is
true or not, but no rational argument can be made on either side of this issue,
because the words used are completely undefined. Nor is Hillary Clinton the
only one who talks this way.
It is one of the many signs of the mindlessness of our
times that all sorts of people declare that “the rich” are not paying their
“fair share” in taxes, without telling us concretely what they mean by either
“the rich” or “fair share.”
Whether in politics or in the media, words are
increasingly used, not to convey facts or even allegations of facts, but simply
to arouse emotions. Undefined words are a big handicap in logic, but they are a
big plus in politics, where the goal is not clarity but victory — and the votes
of gullible people count just as much as the votes of people who have common
sense.
What a “fair share” of taxes means in practice is simply
“more.” No matter how high the tax rate is on people with a given income, you
can always raise the tax rate further by saying that they are still not paying
their “fair share.”
Advocates of higher tax rates can get very specific when
they want to. A recent article in the New
York Times says that raising the tax rate on the top one percent of income
earners to 40 percent would generate “about $157 billion” a year in additional
tax revenue for the government.
This ignores mountains of evidence, going back for
generations, showing that raising tax rates does not automatically mean raising
tax revenues — and has often actually led to falling tax revenues. A fantasy
expressed in numbers is still a fantasy.
When the state of Maryland raised its tax rate on people
with incomes of a million dollars a year or more, the number of such people
living in Maryland fell from nearly 8,000 to fewer than 6,000. Although it had
been projected that the tax revenue collected from such people in Maryland
would rise by $106 million, instead these revenues FELL by $257 million.
There was a similar reaction in Oregon and in Britain.
Rich people do not simply stand still to be sheared like sheep. They can either
send their money somewhere else or they can leave themselves.
Currently, there are trillions of dollars of American
money creating jobs overseas, in places where tax rates are lower. It is easy
to transfer money electronically from country to country. But it is not nearly
so easy for unemployed American workers to transfer themselves to where the
jobs have been driven by high tax rates.
Conversely, there have been some reductions in high tax
rates that brought in more tax revenues at the lower rates. This happened as
far back as the Coolidge administration in the 1920s. It also happened in the
Kennedy administration in the 1960s, the Reagan administration in the 1980s,
and most recently in the Bush 43 administration. There was a similar reaction
in Iceland.
There is nothing inevitable about either a higher or a
lower amount of tax revenues, whether the tax rate is raised or lowered. The
government can only set tax rates. How that will affect the tax revenues
actually received depends on how people react, and you can know that only after
the fact. Sophisticated projections have often been laughably wrong.
Contrary to the way some people on the left conceive of
the world, neither rich people nor poor people are inert blocks of wood, to be
moved about like pieces on a chess board, to carry out some grand design from
on high.
Even outright confiscations of people’s wealth, including
whole industries in some countries, have failed to spread prosperity, and have
even led to collapsing economies.
But politics is not about what happened in the past. That
is left for historians. What politicians are interested in is what they can get
the public to believe in the present and to vote on in the future. Plans to
“soak the rich,” who are not paying their “fair share,” have worked
politically, time and time again — and may well work yet again in the 2016
elections.
No comments:
Post a Comment