Case Closed
Tax cuts mean growth.
BY FRED THOMPSON
Saturday, April 14, 2007 12:01 a.m. EDT
It's that time
again, and I was thinking of the old joke about paying your taxes with
a smile. The punch line is that the IRS doesn't accept smiles. They
want your money.
So it's not that funny, but there
is reason to smile this tax season. The results of the experiment that
began when Congress passed a series of tax-rate cuts in 2001 and 2003
are in. Supporters of those cuts said they would stimulate the economy.
Opponents predicted ever-increasing budget deficits and national
bankruptcy unless tax rates were increased, especially on the wealthy.
In fact, Treasury statistics show
that tax revenues have soared and the budget deficit has been shrinking
faster than even the optimists projected. Since the first tax cuts were
passed, when I was in the Senate, the budget deficit has been cut in
half.
Remarkably, this has happened
despite the financial trauma of 9/11 and the cost of the War on Terror.
The deficit, compared to the entire economy, is well below the average
for the last 35 years and, at this rate, the budget will be in surplus
by 2010.
Perhaps the most fascinating thing
about this success story is where the increased revenues are coming
from. Critics claimed that across-the-board tax cuts were some sort of
gift to the rich but, on the contrary, the wealthy are paying a greater
percentage of the national bill than ever before.
The richest 1% of Americans now pays 35% of all income taxes. The top 10% pay more taxes than the bottom 60%.
The reason for this outcome is
that, because of lower rates, money is being invested in our economy
instead of being sheltered from the taxman. Greater investment has
created overall economic strength. Job growth is robust, overcoming
trouble in the housing sector; and the personal incomes of Americans at
every income level are higher than they've ever been.
President John F. Kennedy was an
astute proponent of tax cuts and the proposition that lower tax rates
produce economic growth. Calvin Coolidge and Ronald Reagan also
understood the power of lower tax rates and managed to put through cuts
that grew the U.S. economy like Kansas corn. Sadly, we just don't seem
able to keep that lesson learned.
Now, as before, politicians are
itching to fund their pet projects with the short-term revenue
increases that come from tax hikes, ignoring the long-term pain they
always cause. Unfortunately, the tax cuts that have produced our
record-breaking government revenues and personal incomes will expire
soon. Because Congress has failed to make them permanent, we are facing
the worst tax hike in our history. Already, worried investors are
trying to figure out what the financial landscape will look like in
2011 and beyond.
This issue is particularly
important now because massive, unfunded entitlements are coming due as
the baby-boom generation retires. We simply cannot afford higher taxes
if we want an economy able to bear up under the strain of those
obligations. And beyond the issue of our annual federal budget is the
nearly $9 trillion national debt that we have not even begun to pay off.
To face these challenges, and any
others that we might encounter in a hazardous world, we need to
maintain economic growth and healthy tax revenues. That is why we need
to reject taxes that punish rather than reward success. Those who say
they want a "more progressive" tax system should be asked one question:
Are you really interested in tax
rates that benefit the economy and raise revenue--or are you interested
in redistributing income for political reasons?
Mr. Thompson is a former
Republican senator from Tennessee whose commentaries, "The Fred
Thompson Report," can be heard on the ABC Radio network.
source article - Opinion Journal
Forum thread
Here's a fine site with links to Fred's audio and commentaries Draft Thompson 08
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