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Tax reform even Geithner couldn't screw up
By Michael Swartz | 01/25/09 | 07:35 AM EDT | 0 Comments
Despite the fact Treasury Secretary designate Timothy Geithner managed to mess up his taxes
over several years to the tune of underpaying $34,000 - even though his
employer gave him instructions on how to deal with the issue and
reimbursed him for the taxes paid - it appears he'll be confirmed
nonetheless; that is if the overwhelming vote to bring him out of
committee is any indication.
But this post isn't intended to bring up that old news; after all,
don't we all mess up on our taxes to the tune of many months' salary
for those of us who don't work in the elite financial world? On the
contrary, I think it's a perfect time to discuss a subject I've waxed
eloquent on a number of times before.
Little noticed among the hundreds of bills introduced in the House
of Representatives is yet another attempt to implement the FairTax. For
the fourth Congress in a row, H.R. 25
is sponsored by Georgia Rep. John Linder and will likely again never
see the light of day, buried in committee. (Maybe he needs a new bill
number since 25 isn't cutting it.) The only problem I see with it is
H.R. 25 doesn't repeal the Sixteenth Amendment. (However, there is an
aptly-numbered resolution in this Congress which does call for repeal.)
This would be perfect for someone like Tim Geithner, who claimed to
simply use TurboTax to do his returns. (Listen, I used that program
last year and will do so again - there's no way I was $34,000 off! My
refund wasn't even a tenth of that.)
Some may argue that a recession is a poor time to enact a tax which is based on consumption, but I heartily disagree.
Now is the perfect time for the FairTax because we'd have a
worst-case scenario for revenue generation. As economic conditions
improve - as they surely would if those of us who are working no longer
have to deal with the IRS backup withholding out of our check, meaning
more money in our pockets to spend - the government could start gaining
the funds to pay for other important items like an enhanced military
and backstopping entitlements (at least until they're sunsetted; hey if
I'm going to dream I'm dreaming big!)
The problem with the Obama Administration's favored solution to our
economic woes is that they determine where the money goes and how it's
spent. (Not to mention they're essentially creating the cash from whole
cloth and adding trillions to our budget deficit. Didn't the Democrats
complain about the GOP presidents' huge deficits?)
Instead of bailing out every bank and automaker who has run into
trouble because they couldn't say no, why not truly stimulate the
economy by allowing the public (read: the market) to determine where
they spend their own money? I know, they may do something stupid like
put it in the bank or invest the money in tax-free municipal bonds
instead of buying the latest made-in-China electronic gadgets, but to
each his or her own, right?
The more I think about the situation with taxation in our state and
our nation, the more I think a consumption tax makes sense. I realize
Maryland went to increase their sales tax and didn't draw the revenue
they expected, but that was because of competition from adjoining
states. If every state has to collect a particular percentage federal
tax, it may level the playing field to some extent. (I'd still go to
Delaware for big-ticket items but perhaps that threshold would
increase.)
So while I'm probably beating my head against the wall expecting
some sort of sane action out of this edition of Congress, hope does
spring eternal and perhaps Linder's idea may finally get some traction.
TAGS: Timothy Geithner, taxation
0 Comments | Related Topics »National | 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. | Wall Street | Capitol Hill | Obama Watch | Department of the Treasury | SPOTLIGHT (Editorial Staff Only) | Conservatism | President Obama
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