Redstate...
Senator
Coburn: The Agony of a
Pragmatic Conservative Amidst Inflexible Liberals
Is more income redistribution the
solution?
Posted by Daniel Horowitz
Tuesday,
November 15th
Senator
Tom Coburn released a report, Subsidies
of the Rich and Famous, detailing a list of subsidies, transfers, and
“tax
breaks,” that are paid to individuals with Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
of over
$1 million. The
report found that
millionaires have received at least $9.5 billion in “government
payments” since
2003 and $113.7 billion in “tax breaks” since 2006.
Accordingly, Coburn concludes that many of
these tax deductions should be eliminated, while benefits for the rich
should
be means-tested or reduced.
As
our debt approaches $15 trillion,
Coburn’s heart is undoubtedly in the right place; however, many of his
proposals are misguided. While
some of
the deductions enumerated in this report should be eliminated
immediately, most
of the savings will come from revoking universal tax deductions from
those who
already have the highest tax burden.
Additionally, while some of the subsidies,
such as the farm and green
handouts, should be abolished, most of Coburn’s savings on government
benefits
would come from reducing Social Security payments to the rich. Social Security payments,
unlike welfare and
other subsidy programs, represent real money that was paid into the
system
through payroll taxes. Any
effort to
deny those payments from the rich would engender further redistribution
of a
program that was not conceived for redistribution.
Also, it would ostensibly be a 12.4% tax
increase on those high-income earners, as they would pay the tax
without
receiving the retirement checks.
Let’s
drill through the numbers of the
report. Click below
for charts online.
As
you can see, $9 billion of the $9.5
billion in government payments to the rich were nothing more than
Social
Security checks – the same payments that every American retiree enjoys. Unlike the farm and
conservation payments
(which are relatively small), Social Security payments come (or at
least, are
supposed to come) directly from the 12.4% payroll tax.
Are the rich not entitled to Social
Security? Should
they pay into the
system without receiving their due benefits?
In
regard to Medicare, Senator Coburn
was unable to obtain the cost of benefits for millionaires, but he
suggests
that they be means-tested like Social Security.
The problem is that upper-income earners are
the only ones who, on average,
earn the full cost of their Medicare benefits.
As we noted a few weeks ago, due to the lack
of income caps on Medicare
payroll taxes (unlike Social Security taxes), those making more than
$130,000
every year of their career will earn their benefits.
Again, should the rich pay into the system
without receiving their due benefits?
Senator
Coburn seems to think so. He
asserts that Social Security was never
intended to be a universal insurance program, but “a safety net for
low-income
earners.” He
concludes that “returning
the purpose of the program to a need-based service instead of one
available
universally may help keep Social Security solvent for future
generations.”
There
are several problems with this
approach.
First,
Social Security was never sold
as a welfare program for low-income earners.
In all of FDR’s speeches, he referred to the
system as a universal
insurance program for all retirees.
In a
1936 campaign speech, FDR promised that payroll taxes would be “held by
the
Government solely for the benefit of the worker in his old age.” He referred to Social
Security as an
insurance program numerous times throughout the speech, concluding that
“in
effect, we have set up a savings account for the old age of the worker.” This description of Social
Security cannot
possibly be misconstrued to define a transfer program similar to
Medicaid and
Food Stamps.
Second,
since the inception of
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) in 1972, we already have a
means-tested
program for retirees. That
program costs
us $56 billion a year and is already funded by general revenues, 36.7%
of which
comes from the top 1% of earners.
If we
have SSI for the poor, why should we double-dip on wealth
redistribution by
turning Old Age and Survives benefits into a means-tested program? Moreover, it is precisely
low-income earners
who are the only true beneficiaries of the current Social Security
system. According
to most studies, middle and
upper-income earners actually lose money off the program, when the
expectation
for reasonable interest returns is factored in.
Third,
collecting payroll taxes from
millionaires without granting commensurate benefits is ostensibly a
massive tax
increase. Such a
proposition would also
inject more progressiveness and redistribution into a system that is
already
one of the most progressive in the world.
Presumably, the good senator opposes an
outright increase in the top
marginal income tax rates. So
why would
he support this de facto increase of the payroll tax.
Or put another way, if he believes that
making the rich pay more is a fair and perspicacious way to deal with
the debt,
why not directly raise taxes on the rich?
This
brings me to the second half of
the Coburn report – tax deductions for the rich:
As
conservatives, we can all agree
that green social engineering must be eliminated from the tax code –
for
everyone. Senator
Coburn has done
yeoman’s work exposing the folly of ethanol and green handouts. However, regarding the
mortgage interest
deduction, why should we eliminate that for the rich?
Many (but not all) conservatives argue that
we should institute a low flat tax, but eliminate this deduction
because it
distorts the market. Nonetheless,
the
revocation of this deduction should be universal, and it should not be
implemented
before comprehensive tax cuts are enacted.
The
same thing holds true for the
Rental Expenses Deduction. That
is a
universal deduction for any property owner who puts money into his
property. Most of
these people are already
paying up to their noses in taxes.
Moreover, this deduction is pro-growth because
it encourages property
owners to hire many new workers. The
contractor that is now making $100,000 more as a result of the owner’s
rental
expensing will also pay more taxes.
What
about the Gambling Losses
Deduction? This is
not a handout to the
rich. One can only
deduct gambling
losses from gambling gains, which are completely taxable. Anyone who is in the
highest income tax
bracket would pay 35% on their gambling earnings.
The Gambling Losses Deduction merely allows
them to reduce their taxable gambling earnings, not their general
taxable
income.
If
there are a few individual
millionaires who pay little or no income taxes as a result of quirks in
the
system, then it should be dealt with in a broader reform of the tax
code. However, the
overwhelming majority of
millionaires pay more in taxes than any other group.
Again, in 2009, the top 1% paid 36.7% of
income taxes, even though they only earned 16.9% of AGI. Does Mr. Coburn agree with
Democrats that
they don’t already pay enough?
The
bottom line is that our debt
problem is not the result of a dearth of means-tested programs or an
insufficient tax burden on the rich.
If
we confiscated the entire AGI of those who earn over $1 million
(roughly $730
billion), we would still fail to cover the $950 billion (and rapidly
growing)
price tag of the 185 means-tested programs.
At best, these “reforms” would trade small,
short-term deficit
reductions for long-term economic decline.
Clearly, if redistribution was the solution to
the debt crisis, Europe
would be in great shape.
We
certainly don’t need more
redistributive taxes to fund more means-tested programs. Instead, we need a
reduction in subsidization
that is balanced with a reduction in taxation, regulation, litigation,
along
with an American energy production program, free-market healthcare
reform, and
private retirement accounts. An
authentic reduction in dependency, together with a transformation to a
free-market society, would foster such economic growth and prosperity
that we
would no longer need welfare programs beyond the most basic and limited
safety
net. The rest would
be dealt with
through the civil society.
Undoubtedly,
as a good conservative,
Senator Coburn agrees with the aforementioned objectives. In fact, his previous
magnum opus, Back in
the Black, seeks to accomplish just that.
Unfortunately, the good senator perceives
those goals as out of
reach. Consequently,
he is willing to do
anything that would result in deficit reduction, even if it is
short-lived and
exacerbates the redistributive socialism in our society.
I
understand where he is coming from,
but strongly urge him to consider this rule:
Don’t show your cards on willingness to raise
taxes and means-test
universal insurance programs until Democrats show as much alacrity to
diminish
the welfare state.
Read
this column with charts, plus
others, at Redstate
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