Sunday, August 7, 2011

The S&P downgrade, and why revenues are necessary

Anyone who has been following this mess in Washington is aware of the fact that Standard and Poor's downgraded the U.S. Government's debt rating.  Many on the right are pointing out that the primary reason given was a failure to cut the National Debt significantly enough, and that this means that the crap deal hammered out in Congress didn't go far enough.  True and False.


The National Debt, generally, is the amount of money owed by (or taken on credit) by the national government, as opposed to the Deficit, which is the shortfall between revenues and spending.  The problem with Debt is that it must (or damn well better) be paid, and this guarantees further increase of deficits under almost any circumstance.  The National Debt is necessitated by the Deficit, to adjust for shortfalls, to make sure that money continues to move to necessary services.

The only way to prevent the government to accrue less debt while responsibly fulfilling its functions and obligations is to adjust the revenue structure.  Yes, taxes.  I am going to avoid numbers deliberately, and just try to illustrate this simply.  Deficit = Spending + Revenue, where spending is a negative number, and revenue is positive.  The only way to reduce the deficit absolutely (since spending can not conceivably reach zero) is to increase revenues.  The most sensible, reliable, short-term solution to this is to raise taxes levied domestically, especially income taxes.  Simply erasing the Bush Tax Cuts is enough to take a huge dent out of the Deficit, allowing more fluid capital and, therefore, a more manageable Debt situation.  The less money that needs to be borrowed, it will generally follow that less is borrowed.

Why is it that the rich are expected to pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes?  Simple.  As humans, we all have basic necessities.  Honestly, the cost differential between one's necessities (needs) and another's should be minimal.  Let's say one person makes A dollars income a year, and that one other person makes B dollars, where B is ten times more than A.  Both of these people have the same necessities, which account for, more or less, the same dollar amount, leave a much smaller slice from A behind as they do from B.  It follows that the person who makes B can afford to take on a greater tax burden while still looking after his or her own necessities.

This is the basic principle behind our Progressive Tax system.  While the government should do what it can to protect people and their property, people are more important than property.  Is it more important to protect one man's profits, while failing to protect another man's basic human needs?  The answer, of course, is no.  This is far from some socialist, egalitarian approach.  It is a basic, sensible approach, which leaves plenty behind for the rich, and I would argue that it doesn't go far enough.

The basic aversion to taxes by many people doesn't simply have to do with a selfish desire to hold on to every earned cent, but to insure that the money they give up is spent wisely.  How much more wisely than to pay down the National Debt, allowing a secure future of borrowing, low mortgage rates, etc.?  Most government programs created over the past century have been created under progressive agendas.  They have, then, been routinely dismantled, piece by piece, by reactionary "conservative" agendas, leaving less robust programs, often finding themselves fighting harder for survival under the threat of "austerity" than serving its intended purpose.  As long as the right tries to disable important government institutions, it can be guaranteed that your tax dollars will be less sensibly spent.

Flat Tax?  National Sales Tax?  These are the most ridiculous things ever.  Again, with the stupid Sales Tax idea, it unnecessarily burdens the poor (who can't afford it) because a greater proportion of their income goes towards purchasing things to fulfill their necessities.  It doesn't work, and it is only proposed to attempt some new attempt at what some Texas textbooks almost came to call an "Ownership Economy."  Whatever you call it, it is still slavery, indenture, and a slashing of the American Dream (which, to those have achieved it, it seems to be less important that others can).  If only we could have a sensible body politic and economy devoted to true shared sacrifice and some sense of a categorical imperative, we'd be on the right track.  I feel less and less that this is going to happen.

2 comments:

Evil Mammoth said...

"The basic aversion to taxes by many people doesn't simply have to do with a selfish desire to hold on to every earned cent, but to insure that the money they give up is spent wisely."

I think you'll find that another, and perhaps more primary, objection to the progressive tax system is that it is a form of slavery, at very least a violation of natural property rights (read: liberty) imposed by an illegitimate state. Now, I don't agree with that assessment in the least, but liberals and progressives need to remember that selfishness isn't the only political driver for anti-tax sentiment; it's a big one, but, in many cases, we're talking about a fundamental ideological divide about the role of society and the necessity of the state itself. That's not just a fringe libertarian reading of the situation any longer, even if it does not represent the sentiments of the majority.

It's a bit easier to argue nuts and bolts with someone who is seeking an objective measure of outcome when it comes to their tax dollars being spent. If one objects to foreign war and, thus, objects to paying taxes that go to support said wars, they may change their tune more readily when the war is off than would someone who sees a tax system (especially a progressive tax system) as an infringement on citizens' basic liberties. To this latter person, no appeal to public works, systemic altruism, or deficit reduction will mean anything. None of those things should have existed in the first place—or they should have existed to a much, much smaller extent.

By the way, where is a good reference regarding the Bush tax cuts and how much money letting them expire will save? I thought I heard recently that it will save quite a bit but wouldn't make such a "large dent" as has been suggested. A few quick Google searches yields a number of very different and conflicting numbers. (Obviously, they should be allowed to expire either way.)

Bob said...

I haven't found reliable numbers on rolling back the tax cuts, but
they offer a much simpler alternative to picking and choosing spending
cuts. Something I recently read is that eliminating student aid and
the entire FBI would cut the deficit by less than $100 billion per
year, while the tax cuts have added to the deficit at a higher rate
over the past ten years.

As for property rights issues, I think that in the current
interpretation of the government's obligations by the courts and
legislative development errs on the side favoring a freedom from want.
While I doubt that the Founding Fathers would have agreed with this
philosophy, it is the living document that they crafted that allows
for us to make these determinations.

While the Constitution terms itself the Supreme Law of the Land, it
also derives that power from the people, allowing the citizens' voting
and participation to determine its intent, for better or worse.