Channeling Reagan on Tax Reform

by: Gerald E. Scorse, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Channeling Reagan on Tax Reform
(Photo: Wikimedia)

The day after the midterms, a conservative columnist and a Democratic senator struck the same fiscal chord. Looking ahead, they looked back with longing at America's last meaningful tax reform.

Here's Evan Bayh of Indiana, telling fellow Democrats how to shake it off and get their mojo back: "A good place to start would be tax reform … . Reward savings and investment. Simplify the code to reduce compliance costs and broaden the base. In 1986, this approach attracted bipartisan support and fostered growth."

And here's Ross Douthat, blogging: "[N]early all the historical models for the kind of big reforms I'd like to see - the Reagan tax overhauls, the budget deals of the Clinton and first Bush presidencies … took place amid divided government … ."

Now is the time to fight ignorance - help Truthout get the word out by donating here.

Ronald Reagan's Tax Reform Act of 1986 is the bill Bayh praised, and the most sweeping of those hailed by Douthat. Neither Bayh nor Douthat mentioned, but both surely know, that one of the bill's signature provisions could bring a strong tax-equity case to the debates shaping up on the Hill - first over extending the Bush cuts, then over tax policy in general.

In 1986, taking a step long sought by liberals, Reagan equalized taxes on income from investments and income from wages. With his last fiscal legacy, he ended more than six decades of lower taxes on income from wealth than income from work.

What persuaded him? In a section titled "Fairness," the bipartisan Joint Committee on Taxation laid out the case. The opening minces no words:

A primary objective of Congress was to provide a tax system that ensures that individuals with similar incomes pay similar amounts of tax. (Italics added.) The ability of some individuals to reduce their tax liability excessively under prior law eroded the tax base and required tax rates to be higher than otherwise would have been necessary … .

Tax breaks on capital gains came roaring back in 1997 under President Clinton and were sweetened again in 2003 by President Bush. The current rate on long-term gains stands at 15 percent, the lowest since FDR's first term. According to the K Street spin, capital gains deserve lower rates; after all, the spinners claim, buying shares in the market grows businesses, grows jobs and grows the economy.

In their dreams.

In reality, only a trace amount of the billions that change hands on Wall Street every day grows anything. Aside from initial public offerings (IPOs) and secondary offerings, not a dime that's invested in the market goes to companies. In fact, through dividends and stock buybacks, money flows in the opposite direction — out of companies, into the hands of investors. These investors aren't growing companies, they're growing portfolios.

Making money in the market is a wonderful thing. It's un-wonderful to tax market gains at a lower rate than wages, benefiting only the haves, the have-mores and especially the have-mosts. (Except, that is, for those IPOs and secondary offerings. Gains from those transactions have a strong claim to accrue tax-free.)

Finally, in a change as basic as any made by Reagan, President Obama and Congress should create an investor tax break that pays off for everybody — not on stocks, but on corporate bonds. Some bonds simply retire debt, but most raise money to upgrade and expand facilities, open new plants and hire new people. It's bonds, not aftermarket stock purchases, that really do grow jobs and grow the economy.

Give bond interest a tax break. "Reward investment," Senator Bayh urged. Back to you, Senator (likewise, every other member of Congress).

An early report from President Obama's bipartisan national debt commission tilted right, but it did call for equal taxes on capital gains, dividends and other income. The commission's final report is due December 1, after which it's up to the president and Congress. From both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue, Americans deserve the same fairness and boldness that marked Ronald Reagan's Tax Reform Act of 1986.
 

 

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Gerald E. Scorse helped pass a bill that tightens the rules for reporting capital gains*. He has an MBA from Baruch College.

*"The basis reporting legislation follows years of hard work by Prof. Jay Soled of Rutgers University, Prof. Joseph M. Dodge of Florida State University, and more recently ... Gerald E. Scorse, who read about the work of the two professors and decided to make this reform his cause." - Excerpt from David Cay Johnston's Tax Notes column of 10/13/2008.


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



Expect nothing from Obama

Expect nothing from Obama and his cohort of Clinton leftovers.



Ronald Reagan was just

Ronald Reagan was just another planted tool in the hands of the proponents of universal Bolshevism. As governor of California, a liberal's liberal. And before a Congressional sub committee while being audited, as to commies in Hollyweird, offered up the implausible answer that he didn't really comprendhend what a commie was. This man was a tool of Hollyweird movie moguls.

Hog



If bonds were clean of our

If bonds were clean of our current muck, investing in them might make sense. Unfortunately, rating agencies are compromised. Bonds may be froth on the horizon, and there is little way for ordinary people to know how to evaluate them. Furthermore, encouraging more heat/ beat/treat and more stuff-generation may not be how we need to prioritize in these times. Should we really keep funding the building of assault vehicles that do not work? It may be a family-wage job, but I'm not getting why others should be forced to fund a vehicle that is not designed to do anything constructive, especially when the government then arranges to buy similar vehicles for Israel from Caterpillar.



Too bad Reagan was an evil

Too bad Reagan was an evil dirtbag.



Jade, agree. All this

Jade, agree.

All this military spending, along with the wealth transfer to China is such ignorance

The wealthy elite BORE ME TO DEATH



When will these corporate

When will these corporate sellouts realize supply side economics does not work, PERIOD.

It doesn't matter how much more profit companies make, they will simply sink it into speculation or corporate bonuses unless demand is outstripping their current ability to deliver.

These are the basics of moral hazard, supply and demand. Suppliers don't simply expand production out of nowhere, they do so in response to rising demand. Remember, employees are EXPENSES, expenses to be minimized unless absolutely necessary! They're biting into the CEO's fifth rolls!



Someone mentioned the

Someone mentioned the "ratings agencies" that gave AAA ratings to everything and anything that Wall Street liked.

If you saw the movie "Inside Job" you would know that they were complicit in the demise of whole countries: Iceland, Greece, now Ireland, next ... the U.K.?

These Moody's, Standard & Poors, Fitch should be shut down for criminal rating behavior that led many an investor, and a nation to ... ruin



Say it louder, Anonymous on

Say it louder, Anonymous on 11/22 at 1:04 - No, SCREAM IT! When you stop to catch your breath, I'll pick up the tirade . . . JAIL THE RATING AGENTS! STEM TO STERN, MAST TO KEEL, PORT TO STARBOARD! Then we'll see how the Carnival Derivative Trolls have to change their ways. Oh, and once the rating agent-criminals are in jail? Seize their assets.



Puh-leeze, Hog: Your screed

Puh-leeze, Hog: Your screed is almost comical in its completely disingenuous error. Reagan was always a tool of the Oligarchy, extremely malleable to those who wished to perpetuate McCarthyism in California and Nationwide, and more for acquisitive ends than ideological. T/O readers START OUT knowing that the current economic quagmire is directly related to Reaganism. Your attempts to hypnotize us haven't worked.