THE
WORLD IN DISORDER
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© August 4, 2015
A READER ASKS,
WHERE IS THE GOVERNMENT IN THIS?
A READER WRITES:
I don’t often agree completely
with simple statements as the world is just too complex, but with these I do
with these two of yours:
“The insanity of the
tax code has been a product of Democrats, Republicans and Independents,
Liberals as well as Conservatives who write the codes.
When it comes to money
sense, we have not been an inspiring people. If you have your doubts,
check our history from the beginning. We throw money at problems hoping
it will stick with something approaching solutions. It seldom does.”
I enjoyed this piece, thanks for
sending it out. A few thoughts raised by it follow.
Your analysis of our history of
the foibles of labor, industry, profit and loss is interesting, but it seems to
me it should have included government, which has been and is overly involved as
I see it, and is less often absent at the downside of economic action than
present on the upside.
The sixteenth amendment was a
massive change in this country’s life. With it “we the people”
provided the government, via constitutional dictate, a claim over all property
by virtue of giving it prior authority over all income earned in the
nation. The individual citizen (or business) has since owned nothing, but
what the government decided to leave him.
What is a “Fair share” is totally
subjective opinion as is one of the other popular phrases used today, “Living
wage”.
How does one fairly decide “Fair
share”, or accurately compute “Living wage”? I don’t know how that would
be properly done, but do believe it hasn’t happened yet. Nor do I think I
would trust the folks championing either of those conditions to honestly make
the call. One reason being their demonstrated tendency to confuse “want”
with “need”. This I think bears on the issue:
The Congressional Budget Office
has just published a study, The Distribution of Household Income and
Federal Taxes, 2010, which shows that the top 40% of income earners paid 106.2%
of total federal income taxes, while the bottom 40% paid -9.1%.
This isn’t the study’s headline,
so you have to dig a bit to get that information, but look at Table 3 on
page 13 of the study to find that information.
The Table shows that the top 20%
of income earners paid 92.9% of total income taxes in 2010 (the latest year
available), and the next-highest 20% paid 13.3% of total income taxes, so the
top 40% paid 106.2%.
Since 92.9% of the tax burden
deemed proper by our political system isn’t, in the minds of some, a “fair
share” one wonders what an appropriate definition would be and, of course, who
would be best qualified to write it?
Is income alone the best measure
of how well the middle, or any other economic class is doing? Might it
not be as much misleading as helpful to honest discussion to focus exclusively
on dollar income? Twenty years ago neither king nor pauper had the access
today provided to all who have a smartphone and that includes nearly all middle
class and most lower income folks.
You say,
“To attempt to do for
others what they best do for themselves is to weaken their resolve and diminish
them as persons. The same holds true of ourselves.”
It is interesting that the
Federal government’s Agricultural Dept. includes the SNAP (food stamp) program
and proudly boasts of feeding 40 plus millions of citizens annually.
That same government includes the
Dept. of the Interior which operates the National Park System of which both the
government and “We the People” are justly proud.
Ironically, in all our dozens of
national parks there are lots of signs, but none so ubiquitous as “Don’t feed
the animals”. If you ask why, they tell you with great concern it makes
the animals dependent and unable to look after themselves.”
I keep hearing that America has
the highest corporate tax rate in the world. Is that true or not?
If American companies could get
by without paying taxes why do they so often try to move their headquarters
overseas to lower their tax burden? Also, is it not true that the decline
in corporate tax payments as a percentage of government revenue occurred
primarily as a result of revenue growth provided by the graduated income tax
system? In fact, I believe the government lowered excise taxes
specifically to gain support for the new tax amendment.
Your comments on the importance
of education are spot on. Any failure of anyone in the top .1% of wage
earners in this country to pay a “fair share” pales in its impact when compared
to the failure of individuals to take advantage of the opportunities made
available to them and the increasing spiral of opportunity that grows from just
completing high school.
I do not accept the argument that
failure to complete high school is caused by poverty. That argument
insults every poor person who stayed and got a diploma. The reasons for
failure to graduate are more complex.
You quote C. Ingraham as writing:
“All my black friends
have a bunch of white friends. And all my white friends have one black
friend.”
That is an interesting way to
suggest that integration is a failure and segregation still abounds, especially
among those racist whites. Yet there is the question, “What is a
bunch?” Could eight be a bunch? Non-Hispanic blacks constitute
12.2% (2010 census) of the US population. Me thinks Mr. Ingraham may be
more about his agenda than facts that prove a point.
This has been fun and I could go
on, but let me just finish by thanking you for continuing to bring thought to
the world.
Take care,
Ted
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
Ted,
This is a remarkable piece of
work. You bring up a number of valid points, which I’m sure will
stimulate other readers upon reading yours, hopefully to check out some of your
references.
You are quite right about my
intentions.
These are difficult times and there
are no simple answers to our societal problems, indeed, to our world
problems.
We are a society like any other
times in the history of man only now we are a global society needing the
participation of all voices from all perspectives to get a handle on our common
destiny.
Thank you for taking the time to
give a well thought out response.
Jim
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